4.6 Oceania — Forgotten Stars episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 11, 2026 · 23 MIN

4.6 Oceania — Forgotten Stars

from A brief history of AI from ancient times to the present day · host Kristy Anamoutou

Forgotten Stars: How Oceania Developed Humanity's First Astronomy — and Was Erased There is an emu that crosses the southern sky. You cannot see it by looking at the bright stars, but by observing the darkness between them.The Aboriginal peoples of Australia had developed what researchers call humanity's first astronomy. Sixty-five thousand years of observing the sky. Constellations in the dark spaces between stars. The Gawarrgay — the great emu — predicts the breeding seasons of the earthly bird.Polynesian navigators memorized two hundred and twenty stars to cross the Pacific without instruments. Their body-counting systems, their kinship mathematics represented algorithms before the word existed.Then came colonization. The legal fiction of terra nullius denied sixty-five thousand years of human presence. Between 1788 and 1900, the Aboriginal population collapsed by ninety percent. The Stolen Generations — children torn from their families between 1910 and 1970 — interrupted knowledge transfer.On the same soil, Ernest Rutherford was born in New Zealand, discovered the atomic nucleus, and received the Nobel Prize. Alexander Aitken, a New Zealand calculating prodigy, could multiply thirteen-digit numbers in his head.Two traditions on the same territory. And no bridge between them. Rutherford was knighted with a coat of arms bearing a Maori warrior — an aesthetic symbol, not an epistemic source.Oceania reminds us that coexistence is not dialogue, that stars can be extinguished in a single generation.

Forgotten Stars: How Oceania Developed Humanity's First Astronomy — and Was Erased There is an emu that crosses the southern sky. You cannot see it by looking at the bright stars, but by observing the darkness between them.The Aboriginal peoples of Australia had developed what researchers call humanity's first astronomy. Sixty-five thousand years of observing the sky. Constellations in the dark spaces between stars. The Gawarrgay — the great emu — predicts the breeding seasons of the earthly bird.Polynesian navigators memorized two hundred and twenty stars to cross the Pacific without instruments. Their body-counting systems, their kinship mathematics represented algorithms before the word existed.Then came colonization. The legal fiction of terra nullius denied sixty-five thousand years of human presence. Between 1788 and 1900, the Aboriginal population collapsed by ninety percent. The Stolen Generations — children torn from their families between 1910 and 1970 — interrupted knowledge transfer.On the same soil, Ernest Rutherford was born in New Zealand, discovered the atomic nucleus, and received the Nobel Prize. Alexander Aitken, a New Zealand calculating prodigy, could multiply thirteen-digit numbers in his head.Two traditions on the same territory. And no bridge between them. Rutherford was knighted with a coat of arms bearing a Maori warrior — an aesthetic symbol, not an epistemic source.Oceania reminds us that coexistence is not dialogue, that stars can be extinguished in a single generation.

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4.6 Oceania — Forgotten Stars

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This episode was published on January 11, 2026.

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Forgotten Stars: How Oceania Developed Humanity's First Astronomy — and Was Erased There is an emu that crosses the southern sky. You cannot see it by looking at the bright stars, but by observing the darkness between them.The Aboriginal peoples of...

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