About LucraLogic


Lucralogic was formed with the goal of providing consumers the very best in communications, navigation, and software products. We utilize our wealth of experience in RF, Acoustic, and Network communications to make revolutionary new products a reality. We achieve excellence in the development of communications based products through the collaboration of experienced teams comprised of individuals and small companies. Our unique structure allows our project team members to share in the ownership of the revolutionary new technologies and products that they develop. We strive to maximize customer value by focusing on technology development areas that are vital to both consumers and commercial customers. We seek to engage our customers as integral parts of our teams and foster effective customer partnerships throughout the development process.


About Lucretius


The company name LucraLogic is a reference to Lucretius, who's poem is one of the earliest surviving attempts to describe the universe based solely on observation and logical detuction. Lucretius was a Roman poet and philosopher who lived from about 99 to 55 BC. He was a student of Epicurus and was the first writer to introduce Roman readers to the Epicurean ideas of Atomism and philosophy. While very little of Epicurus written work remains, he was a key figure in the development of science and the scientific method. His insistence that nothing should be believed, except that which was tested through direct observation and logical deduction was an important move away from the reliance on Devine explanations of natural phenomena. In his poem De rerum natura (On the Nature of Things), Lucretius provides a very complete description of the workings of the universe based on Epicurean physics. Lucretius' poem spans six books and describes the principles of matter and space, the atoms and their movements, the infinity of the universe, the nature of the mind, the evolution of life, and the ultimate mortality of both mind and spirit. According to Lucretius, the mind and spirit were material entities that, just like the body that contained them, ultimately ceased their functions. Lucretius' universe was one that was formed and guided by chance and was infinite in size. His poem provides an explanation for the functioning of almost everything in the universe including the movement of the heavenly bodies, changing of the seasons, day, night, thunder, lightning, weather, earthquakes, and disease. After virtually disappearing during the Middle Ages, the last remaining copy of De rerum natura was rediscovered in 1417 by Poggio Bracciolini and became an important influence during the era of Enlightenment. As described in Stephen Greenblatt's book The Swerve: How the World Became Modern, it is thought that the single discovery of Lucretius' lost poetic works reintroduced important ideas that sparked the modern age. LucraLogic follows in the tradition of Lucretius with the mission of igniting discovery and innovation to create revolutionary new technologies and products to meet our customers ever changing needs.