CONTROVERSIES AS TO HERON’S DATE 305
the distance between Rome and Alexandria. 1 Unfortunately
the text is in places corrupt and deficient, so that the method
cannot be reconstructed in detail. But it involved the obser
vation of the same lunar eclipse at Rome and Alexandria
respectively and the drawing of the analemma for Rome.
That is to say, the mathematical method which Ptolemy
claims to have invented is spoken of by Heron as a thing
generally known to experts and not more remarkable than
other technical matters dealt with in the same book. Conse
quently Heron must have been later than Ptolemy. (It is
right to add that some hold that the chapter of the Dioptra
in question is not germane to the subject of the treatise, and
was probably not written by Heron but interpolated by some
later editor; if this is so, the argument based upon it falls to
the ground.) (2) The dioptra described in Heron’s work is a
fine and accurate instrument, very much better than anything
Ptolemy had at his disposal. If Ptolemy had been aware of
its existence, it is highly unlikely that he would have taken
the trouble to make his separate and imperfect ‘ parallactic ’
instrument, since it could easily have been giafted on to
Heron’s dioptra. Not only, therefore, must Heron have been
later than Ptolemy but, seeing that the technique of instru
ment-making had made such strides in the interval, he must
have been considerably later. (3) In his work -rrepl poncov 2
Ptolemy, as we have seen, disputed the view of Aristotle that
air has weight even when surrounded by air. Aristotle
satisfied himself experimentally that a vessel full of air is
heavier than the same vessel empty; Ptolemy, also by ex
periment, convinced himself that the former is actually the
lighter. Ptolemy then extended his argument to water, and
held that water with water round it has no weight, and that
the diver, however deep he dives, does not feel the weight of
the water above him. Heron 3 asserts that water has no
appreciable weight and has no appreciable power of com
pressing the air in a vessel inverted and forced down into
the water. In confirmation of this he cites the case of the
diver, who is not prevented from breathing when far below
1 Heron, Dioptra, c. 85 (vol. iii, pp. 302—6).
2 Simplicius on De caelo, p. 710, 14, Heib. (Ptolemy, vol. ii, p. 263).
3 Heron, Pneunwtica, i. Pref. (vol. i, p. 22. 14sq.).
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