experimental
No. Science is the understanding of "something". Engineering is the actual doing of "something". You can have engineering without science (think Roman aqueducts) and you can have science without the engineering (interstellar travel). But they do fit together well.
literature, science, and engineering -from Spencer
The Romans did not have much of an approach to science. In fact, were not interested in science and they hardly gave a contribution to science. Pretty much all of the science legacy from antiquity is from the Greeks. With regard to technology, the Romans were good engineers. This came from their being very practical and their penchant for finding solutions for practical problems.
yes and for there advances in science and engineering.
experimentalAnswer from Jazz O'O Soto
Roman engineering did not have any secret weapons. None of the Roman engineering achievements were kept secret.
the Romans took a practical approach, unlike greeks who studied the world just to know about it
The influence of the Roman Catholic Church in the Middle Ages was a major factor in art and science. The Church had a tendency to stifle science while encouraging religious art.
Horace, the Roman poet and writer once said the Greeks gave Rome "everything to study and little to invent." Most Roman science wasn't even Roman. It was instead derived from Archimedes, Ptolemy, or Aristotle. The Romans did however master Engineering and Architecture, which is one of the only pieces of scientific innovation created by the Romans that survived the Dark Ages.
Numerals are used for mathematical calculations. Mathematical calculations are used in science. This is the way Roman numerals related to Roman science.
hi
For the times - brilliant. Look at the 2,000 year old aqueducts and Colosseum. Are our buildings of today likely to stand up anything like that long?