350
FROM PLATO TO EUCLID
Tannery thought that we could hardly help attributing it to
Eudoxus. The suggestion is natural, seeing that Eudoxus
showed, in his theory of concentric spheres, an extraordinary
mastery of the geometry of the sphere ; on the other hand,
as Loria observes, it is, speaking generally, dangerous to
assume that a work of an unknown author appearing in
a certain country at a certain time must have been written
by a particular man of science simply because he is the only
man of the time of whom we can certainly say that he was
capable of writing it. 1 The works of Autolycus also serve to
confirm the pre-Euclidean origin of a number of propositions
in the Elements. Hultsch 1 2 examined this question in detail
in a paper of 1886. There are (1) the propositions pre
supposed in one or other of Autolycus’s theorems. We have
also to take account of (2) the propositions which would be
required to establish the propositions in sphaeric assumed by
Autolycus as known. The best clue to the propositions under
(2) is the actual course of the proofs of the corresponding
propositions in the Sphaerica of Theodosius; for Theodosius
was only a compiler, and we may with great probability
assume that, where Theodosius uses propositions from Euclid’s
Elements, propositions corresponding to them were used to
prove the analogous propositions in the fourth-century
Sphaeric. The propositions which, following this criterion,
we may suppose to have been directly used for this purpose
are, roughly, those represented by Eucl. I. 4, 8, 17, 19, 26, 29,
47 ; III. 1-3, 7, 10, 16 Cor., 26, 28, 29; IV. 6 ; XI. 3, 4, 10, 11,
12, 14, 16, 19, and the interpolated 38. It is, naturally, the
subject-matter of Books I, III, and XI that is drawn upon,
but, of course, the propositions mentioned by no means
exhaust the number of pre-Euclidean propositions even in
those Books. When, however, Hultsch increased the list of
propositions by adding the whole chain of propositions (in
cluding Postulate 5) leading up to them in Euclid’s arrange
ment, he took an unsafe course, because it is clear that many
of Euclid’s proofs -were on different lines from those used
by his predecessors.
1 Loria, Le scienze esatte nelV antica Grecia, 1914, p. 496-7.
2 Berichte der Kgl. Sachs. Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig,
Phil.-hist. Classe, 1886, pp. 128-55.