MECHANICS
19
of the heavens by
b is possible that
In any case Archi-
. Livy calls him
rchus says, ‘ From
ences in the years
is, I almost think
o the extent of a
d in the deduction
tly considered the
iscovered the dis-
iribes in his Sand-
ured the apparent
oretical mechanics,
)rohlera To move a
in reliance £ on the
declared to Hieron
>y any given force
ire given a place to
/C*£ KLVCO TOLV ydv,
y, told by Plutarch,
azement and asked
tice and to give an
by a small force, he
ists from the king’s
ith great labour by
issengers and a full
vith no great effort
ulley (noXvcnr guttos)
Irew the ship along
; through the sea.’ 4
lan ships on fire by
icave mirrors is not
dan; but it is quite
, III. 1, vol. i, p. 194. 23.
ss in Hippolytus, Refut.,
likely that he discovered some form of burning-mirror, e.g. a
paraboloid of revolution, which would reflect to one point all
rays falling on its concave surface in a direction parallel to
its axis.
Archimedes’s own view of the relative importance of his
many discoveries is well shown by his request to his friends
and relatives that they should place upon his tomb a represen
tation of a cylinder circumscribing a sphere, with an inscrip
tion giving the ratio which the cylinder bears to the sphere;
from which we may infer that he regarded the discovery of
this ratio as his greatest achievement. Cicero, when quaestor
in Sicily, found the tomb in a neglected state and repaired it 1 ;
but it has now disappeared, and no one knows where ho was
buried.
Archimedes’s entire preoccupation by his abstract studies is
illustrated by a number of stories. We are told that he would
forget all about his food and such necessities of life, and would
be drawing geometrical figures in the ashes of the fire or, when
anointing himself, in the oil on his body. 2 Of the same sort
is the tale that, when he discovered in a bath the solution of
the question referred to him by Hieron, as to whether a certain
crown supposed to have been made of gold did not in fact con
tain a certain proportion of silver, he ran naked through the
street to his home shouting evprjKa, evprjKa. 3 He was killed
in the sack of Syracuse by a Roman soldier. The story is
told in various forms; the most picturesque is that found in
Tzetzes, which represents him as saying to a Roman soldier
who found him intent on some diagrams which he had drawn
in the dust and came too close, ‘ Stand away, fellow, from my
diagram’, whereat the man was so enraged that he killed
him. 4
Summary of main achievements.
In geometry Archimedes’s work consists in the main of
original investigations into the quadrature of curvilinear
plane figures and the quadrature and cubature of curved
surfaces. These investigations, beginning where Euclid’s
Book XII left off, actually (in the words of Chasles) ‘ gave
1 Cicero, Tusc. v. 64 sq. ’ 2 Plutarch, Marcellus, c. 17.
3 Vitruvius, De architecture!,, ix. 1. 9, 10.
4 Tzetzes, Chiliad, ii. 35. 135.
c 2