TY - BOOK AU - Baber, Zaheer. TI - The science of empire: scientific knowledge, civilization, and colonial rule in India T2 - SUNY series in science, technology, and society SN - 0791429202 AV - Q175.52.I4 B33 1996 U1 - 306.450954 20 PY - 1996/// CY - Albany PB - State University of New York Press KW - Science KW - Social aspects KW - India KW - History KW - Technology KW - British occupation, 1765-1947 N1 - Includes bibliographical references (p. [257]-287) and index; 1. Introduction -- 2. Science, Technology, and Social Structure in Ancient India -- 3. Science, Technology, and Society in Medieval India -- 4. The Origins of British Colonial Rule -- 5. Scientific Solutions for Colonial Problems -- 6. Science, Technology and Colonial Power -- 7. Conclusions: Science, Technology and Ecological Limits N2 - In The Science of Empire, Zaheer Baber analyzes the social context of the origins and development of science and technology in India from antiquity through colonialism to the modern period. The focus is on the two-way interaction between science and society: how specific social and cultural factors led to the emergence of specific scientific/technological knowledge systems and institutions that transformed the very social conditions that produced them. A key feature is the author's analysis of the role of precolonial trading circuits and other institutional factors in transmitting scientific and technological knowledge from India to other civilizational complexes. A significant portion represents an analysis of the role of modern science and technology in the consolidation of the British empire in India ER -