OPTICS
443
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appears to be a circle; if the eye approaches nearer to
the sphere the portion seen becomes less, though it appears
greater ; if we see the sphere with two eyes, we see a hemi
sphere, or more than a hemisphere, or less than a hemisphere
according as the distance between the eyes is equal to, greater
than, or less than the diameter of the sphere; these pro
positions are comparable with Aristarchus’s Proposition 2
stating that, if a sphere be illuminated by a larger sphere,
the illuminated portion of the former will be greater
than a hemisphere. Similar propositions with regard to the
cylinder and cone follow (Props. 28-33). Next Euclid con
siders the conditions for the apparent equality of different
diameters of a circle as. seen from an eye occupying various
positions outside the plane of the circle (Props. 34-7) ; he
shows that all diameters will appear equal, or the circle will
really look like a circle, if the line joining the eye to the
centre is perpendicular to the plane of the circle, or, not being
perpendicular to that plane, is equal to the length of the
radius, but this will not otherwise be the case (35), so that (36)
a chariot wheel will sometimes appear circular, sometimes
awry, according to the position of the eye. Propositions
37 and 38 prove, the one that there is a locus such that, if the
eye remains at oiqe point of it, while a straight line moves so
that its extremities always lie on it, the line will always
capear of the same length in whatever position it is placed
(not being one in which either of the extremities coincides
with, or the extremities are on opposite sides of, the point
at which the eye is placed), the locus being, of course, a circle
in which the straight line is placed as a chord, when it
necessarily subtends the same angle at the circumference or at
the centre, and therefore at the eye, if placed at a point of the
circumference or at the centre ; the other proves the same thing
for the case where the line is fixed with its extremities on the
locus, while the eye moves upon it. The same idea underlies
several other propositions, e.g. Proposition 45, which proves
that a common point can be found from which unequal
magnitudes will appear equal. The unequal magnitudes arc
straight lines EG, CD so placed that BCD is a straight line.
A segment greater than a semicircle is described on EG, and
a similar segment on CD. The segments will then intersect