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For centuries, Ancient Greece has enjoyed the kudos of being regarded as the birthplace of science. Now India is hoping to trump the homeland of Archimedes — in part by laying claim to the world’s first nose job.
Generations of Indians have believed that Westerners such as Aristotle drove scientific advances, largely because the Indian education system was framed by Britain, according to N.R. Iyer, the director of Delhi’s National Science Centre.
“Students around the world learn only the history of Western science,” he said. “There is the widespread perception that science began in Greece. We want to correct this, and publicise advances made in India as long as 5,000 years ago.”
A new exhibition at the centre suggests that the study of atomic theory, mathematics, biology and cosmic evolution were all born in the subcontinent — when Britons were living in huts made of wattle and daub.
The exhibition, the largest of its kind in the country, is intended to foster a sense of “scientific nationalism” among the burgeoning middle classes. Highlights include the work of Sushruta, who lived around 600BC and performed “sophisticated reconstructive surgery” — probably on convicts who had their noses cut off as punishment. He may, therefore, have been the world’s first cosmetic surgeon, working about 150 years before Hippocrates — the Greek credited as “the father of medicine” — formulated his famous oath.
The centre has also been directed by the Indian Government to form a committee of experts to write papers laying claim to areas of science that arguably have their roots in India. Top of the list is likely to be mathematics and the decimal system, and specifically the concept “zero” — a word derived from the Sanskrit shunya.
The first known use of a symbol for zero appears on a stone inscription, found at Gwalior in northern India, dating from AD876.
Indian scientists have welcomed the proposals, but fear they will also highlight how little innovation there has been in the country in the modern period. “It’s sad, but there has been no Indian Einstein or Newton,” said Dr Kankan Bhattacharyya, director of the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science.
“India was fantastically advanced in the ancient world — but in the past 1,000 years, we’ve fallen behind.”
The Delhi exhibition shows advances in smelting from AD800, breakthroughs in astronomy between AD400 and AD1000 and multiple cropping used by farmers in 2500BC.
However, the poster boy for the campaign is Sushruta — claimed as a genius — who pioneered rhinoplasty: rebuilding noses. He wrote: “The portion of the nose to be covered should be measured with a leaf. Then skin of the required size should be dissected from the living skin of the cheek, and turned back to cover the nose, keeping a small pedicle attached to the cheek.
“The physician should then stitch the two parts swiftly, keeping the skin elevated by inserting two tubes of eranda (the castor-oil plant) in the position of the nostrils.”
Sushruta also prescribed a rudimentary form of pain relief for the procedure. “Wine should be used before operation to produce insensibility,” he said.
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