• MATHEMATICAL ‘ARTS’
309
(ardd/xr]) and ‘ a certain elaborate npoa-aydyiov ’ (1 approxi
mator). The art of weighing, he says, 1 ‘ is concerned with
the lieavier and lighter weight ’, as ‘ logistic ’ deals with odd
and even in their relation to one another, and geometry with
magnitudes greater and less or equal; in the Protagoras he
speaks of the man skilled in weighing
‘ who puts together first the pleasant, and second the painful
things, and adjusts the near and the far on the balance ’ 2 ;
the principle of the lever was therefore known to Plato, who
was doubtless acquainted with the work of Archytas, the
reputed founder of the science of mechanics, 3
(a) Optics.
In the physical portion of the Timaeus Plato gives his
explanation of the working of the sense organs. The account
of the process of vision and. the relation of vision to the
light of day is interesting, 4 and at the end of it is a reference
to the properties of mirrors, which is perhaps the first indica
tion of a science of optics. When, says Plato, we see a thing
in a mirror, the fire belonging to the face combines about the
bright surface of the mirror with the fire in the visual current;
the right portion of the face appears as the left in the image
seen, and vice versa, because it is the mutually opposite parts
of the visual current and of the object seen which come into
contact, contrary to the usual mode of impact. (That is, if you
imagine your reflection in the mirror to be another person
looking at you, his left eye is the image of your right, and the
left side of his left eye is the image of the right side of your
right.) But, on the other hand, the right side really becomes
the right side and the left the left when the light in com
bination with that with which it combines is transferred from
one side to the other; this happens when the smooth part
of the mirror is higher at the sides than in the middle (i. e. the
mirror is a hollow cylindrical mirror held with its axis
vertical), and so diverts the right portion of the visual current
to the left and vice versa. And if you turn the mirror so that
its axis is horizontal, everything appears upside down.
1 Charmides, 166 B, 2 Protagoras, 356 B.
3 Diog. L. viii. 88, 4 Timaeus, 45 b-46 c.