82
ARCHIMEDES
of the universe, has to make certain assumptions as to the
sizes and distances of the sun and moon and their relation
to the size of the universe, he takes the opportunity of
quoting earlier views. Some have tried, he says, to prove
that the perimeter of the earth is about 300,000 stades; in
order to be quite safe he will take it to be about ten times
this, or 3,000,000 stades, and not greater. The diameter of
the earth, like most earlier astronomers, he takes to be
greater than that of the moon but less than that of the sun.
Eudoxus, he says, declared the diameter of the sun to be nine
times that of the moon, Phidias, his own father, twelve times,
while Aristarchus tried to prove that it is greater than 18 but
less than 20 times the diameter of the moon; he will again be
on the safe side and take it to be 30 times, but not more. The
position is rather more difficult as regards the ratio of the
distance of the sun to the size of the universe. Here he seizes
upon a dictum of Aristarchus that the sphere of the fixed
stars is so great that the circle in which he supposes the earth
to revolve (round the sun) ‘bears such a proportion to the
distance of the fixed stars as the centre of the sphere bears to
its surface ’. If this is taken in a strictly mathematical sense,
it means that the sphere of the fixed stars is infinite in size,
which would not suit Archimedes’s purpose ; to get another
meaning out of it he presses the point that Aristarchus’s
words cannot be taken quite literally because the centre, being
without magnitude, cannot be in any ratio to any other mag
nitude ; hence he suggests that a reasonable interpretation of
the statement would be to suppose that, if we conceive a
sphere with radius equal to the distance between the centre
of the sun and the centre of the earth, then
(diam. of earth): (diam. of said sphere)
= (diam. of said sphere): (diam. of sphere of fixed stars).
This is, of course, an arbitrary interpretation; Aristarchus
presumably meant no such thing, but merely that the size of
the earth is negligible in comparison with that of the sphere
of the fixed stars. However, the solution of Archimedes’s
problem demands some assumption of the kind, and, in making
this assumption, he was no doubt aware that he was taking
a liberty with Aristarchus for the sake of giving his hypo
thesis an air of authority.
with
Aris
of
said
diair
side
mad(
diam
at rq
he
horizc
failed
He
i
2 0 0
tions
the
for th
This
mann
Let
and ea