AUTOLYCUS AND EUCLID
351
, The work On the moving Sphere assumes abstractly a
sphere moving about the axis stretching from pole to pole,
and different series of circular sections, the first series being
great circles passing through the poles, the second small
circles (as well as the equator) which are sections of the
sphere by planes at right angles to the axis and are called
the ‘parallel circles’, while the third kind are great circles
inclined obliquely to the axis of the sphere; the motion of
points on these circles is then considered in relation to the
section by a fixed plane through the centre of the sphere.
It is easy to recognize in the oblique great circle in the sphere
the ecliptic or zodiac circle, and in the section made by the
fixed plane the horizon, which is described as the circle
in the sphere ‘ which defines (opi¿W) the visible and the
invisible portions of the sphere’. To give an idea of the
content of the work, I will quote a few enunciations from
Autolycus and along with two of them, for the sake of
comparison with Euclid, the corresponding enunciations from
the Phaenomena.
Autolycus. Euclid.
1. If a sphere revolve uni
formly about its own axis, all
the points on the surface of the
sphere which are not on the
axis will describe parallel
circles which have the same
poles as the sphere and are
also at right angles to the axis.
7. If the circle in the sphere
defining the visible and the
invisible portions of the sphere
be obliquely inclined to the
axis, the circles which are at
right angles to the axis and cut
the defining circle [horizon]
always make both their risings
and settings at the same points
of the defining circle [horizon]
and further will also be simi
larly inclined to that circle.
3. The circles which are at
right angles to the axis and
cut the horizon make both
their risings and settings at
the same points of the horizon.