18
ARCHIMEDES
the making of spheres and produce a model of the heavens by
means of the circular motion of water’, it is possible that
Archimedes’s sphere was moved by water. In any case Archi
medes was much occupied with astronomy, Livy calls him
‘ unicus spectator caeli siderumque ’} Hipparchus says, ‘ From
these observations it is clear that the differences in the years
are altogether small, hut, as to the solstices, I almost think
that Archimedes and I have both erred to the extent of a
quarter of a day both in the observation and in the deduction
therefrom ’. 2 Archimedes then had evidently considered the
length of the year. Macrobius says he discovered the dis
tances of the planets, 3 and he himself describes in his Sand-
reckoner the apparatus by which he measured the apparent
angular diameter of the sun.
(/3) Mechanics.
Archimedes wrote, as we shall see, on theoretical mechanics,
and it was by theory that he solved the problem To move a
given weight by a given force, for it was in reliance ‘ on the
irresistible cogency of his proof ’ that he declared to Hieron
that any given weight could be moved by any given force
(however small), and boasted that, ‘ if he were given a place to
stand on, he could move the earth ’ (nd (3d>, Kkl kluco rdv ydv,
as he said in his Doric dialect). The story, told by Plutarch,
is that, ‘ when Hieron was struck with amazement and asked
Archimedes to reduce the problem to practice and to give an
illustration of some great weight moved by a small force, he
fixed upon a ship of burden with three masts from the king’s
arsenal which had only been drawn up with great labour by
many men, and loading her with many passengers and a full
freight, himself the while sitting far off, with no great effort
but only holding the end of a compound pulley (noXva-Traa-Tos)
quietly in his hand and pulling at it, he drew the ship along
smoothly and safely as if she were moving through the sea.’ 4
The story that Archimedes set the Roman ships on fire by
an arrangement of burning-glasses or concave mirrors is not
found in any authority earlier than Lucian; but it is quite
1 Livy xxiv. 84. 2. 2 Ptolemy, Syntaxis, III. 1, vol. i, p. 194. 28.
3 Macrobius, In Somn. Scip. ii. 3; cf. the figures in Hippolytus, Refut.,
p. 66. 52 sq., ed. Duncker.
4 Plutarch, Marcellus, c. 14.
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Book XII lef'
1 Cicero, Tusc.
Vitruvius, D,
4 Tzetzes, Chil