24
ARCHIMEDES
“ works on the lever ” ’d Simplicius refers to problems on the
centre of gravity, KtvrpofiapLKd, such as the many elegant
problems solved by Archimedes and others, the object of which
is to show how to find the centre of gravity, that is, the point
in a body such that if the body is hung up from it, the body
will remain at rest in any position. 1 2 This recalls the assump
tion in the Quadrature of the Parabola (6) that, if a body hangs
at rest from a point, the centre of gravity of the body and the
point of suspension are in the same vertical line. Pappus has
a similar remark with reference to a point of support, adding
that the centre of gravity is determined as the intersection of
two straight lines in the body, through two points of support,
which straight lines are vertical when the body is in equilibrium
so supported. Pappus also gives the characteristic of the centre
of gravity mentioned by Simplicius, observing that this is
the most fundamental principle of the theory of the centre of
gravity, the elementary propositions of which are found in
Archimedes’s On Equilibriums (irepi iaoppomdov) and Heron’s
Mechanics. Archimedes himself cites propositions which must
have been proved elsewhere, e. g. that the centre of gravity
of a cone divides the axis in the ratio 3:1, the longer segment
being that adjacent to the vertex 3 ; he also says that ‘ it is
proved in the Equilibriums ’ that the centre of gravity of any
segment of a right-angled conoid (i. e. paraboloid of revolution)
divides the axis in such a way that the portion towards the
vertex is double of the remainder. 4 It is possible that there
was originally ^larger work by Archimedes On Equilibriums
of which the surviving books On Plane Equilibriums formed
only a part; in that case irepl £vyS>v and KevTpo/SapiKd may
only be alternative titles. Finally, Heron says that Archi
medes laid down a certain procedure in a book bearing the
title ‘ Book on Supports ’. 5
4. Theon of Alexandria quotes a proposition from a work
of Archimedes called Catoptrica (properties of mirrors) to the
effect that things thrown into water look larger and still
larger the farther they sink. 0 Olympiodorus, too, mentions
1 Heron, Mechanics, i. 32.
2 Simpl. on Arist. De caelo, ii, p. 508 a 80, Brandis; p. 543. 24, Heib.
3 Method, Lemma 10. 4 On Floating Bodies, ii. 2,
5 Heron, Mechanics, i. 25.
6 Theon on Ptolemy’s Syntaxis, i, p. 29, Halma.
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