MATHEMATICS IN GREEK EDUCATION 23
ding the in-
le in general
3S time from
Pythagoreans,
: ‘ One of the
is misfortune
by teaching
ippocrates of
nade himself
iction of the
ng two mean
circles are in
so taught for
3 story is that
Iirough being
to Athens to
itay, attended
geometry that
the different
ed of a large
3reby proving,
meter, he was
ary life. 3
ro glimpses of
100I- or class-
.1 as going into
ter 5 ) and find-
of astronomy;
3 theories they
were drawing
ler with their
y of Theodoras
bhe square root
at it is incom-
letetus and the
randis.
L. iii. 5.
younger Socrates thinking whether it was not possible to
comprehend all such surds under one definition. In these two
cases we have advanced or selected pupils discussing among
themselves the subject of lectures they had heard and, in the
second case, trying to develop a theory of a more general
character.
But mathematics was not only taught by regular masters
in schools; the Sophists, who travelled from place to place
giving lectures, included mathematics (arithmetic, geometry,
and astronomy) in their very wide list of subjects. Theo
doras, who was Plato’s teacher in mathematics and is
described by Plato as a master of geometry, astronomy,
logistic and music (among other subjects), was a pupil of
Protagoras, the Sophist, of Abdera. 1 Protagoras himself, if we
may trust Plato, did not approve of mathematics as part of
secondary education ; for he is made to say that
‘ the other Sophists maltreat the young, for, at an age when
the young have escaped the arts, they take them against their
will and plunge them once more into the arts, teaching them
the art of calculation, astronomy, geometry, and music—and
here he cast a glance at Hippias—whereas, if any one comes
to me, he will not be obliged to learn anything except what
he comes for.’ 2
The Hippias referred to is of course Hippias of Elis, a really
distinguished mathematician, the inventor of a curve known
as the quadratrix which, originally intended for the solution
of the problem of trisecting any angle, also served (as the
name implies) for squaring the circle. In the Hippias Minor 3,
there is a description of Hippias’s varied accomplishments.
He claimed, according to this passage, to have gone once to
the Olympian festival with everything that he wore made by
himself, ring "and seal (engraved), oil-bottle, scraper, shoes,
clothes, and a Persian girdle of expensive type; he also took
poems, epics, tragedies, dithyrambs, and all sorts of prose
works. He was a master of the science of calculation
{Logistic), geometry, astronomy, ‘ rhythms and harmonies
and correct writing’. He also had a wonderful system of
mnemonics enabling him, if he once heard a string of fifty
1 Theaetetus, 164 E, 168 E. 2 Prctacjoras, 318 n, E.
3 Hippias Minor, pp. 866 C-368 e.