20
ARCHIMEDES
birth to the calculus of the infinite conceived and brought to
perfection successively by Kepler, Cavalieri, Fermat, Leibniz
and Newton ’. He performed in fact what is equivalent to
integration in finding the area of a parabolic segment, and of
a spiral, the surface and volume of a sphere and a segment of
a sphere, and the volumes of any segments of the solids of
revolution of the second degree. In arithmetic he calculated
approximations to the value of tt, in the course of which cal
culation he shows that he could approximate to the value of
square roots of large or small non-square numbers ; he further
invented a system of arithmetical terminology by which he
could express in language any number up to that which we
should write down with 1 followed by 80,000 million million
ciphers. In mechanics he not only worked out the principles of
the subject but advanced so far as to find the centre of gravity
of a segment of a parabola, a semicircle, a cone, a hemisphere,
a segment of a sphere, a right segment of a paraboloid and
a spheroid of revolution. His mechanics, as we shall see, has
become more important in relation to his geometry since the
discovery of the treatise called The Method which was formerly
supposed to be lost. Lastly, he invented the whole science of
hydrostatics, which again he carried so far as to give a most
complete investigation of the positions of rest and stability of
a right segment of a paraboloid of revolution floating in a
fluid with its base either upwards or downwards, but so that
the base is either wholly above or wholly below the surface of
the fluid. This represents a sum of mathematical achieve
ment unsurpassed by any one man in the world’s history.
Character of treatises.
The treatises are, without exception, monuments of mathe
matical exposition ; the gradual revelation of the plan of
attack, the masterly ordering of the propositions, the stern
elimination of everything not immediately relevant to the
purpose, the finish of the whole, are so impressive in their
perfection as to create a feeling akin to awe in the mind of
the reader. As Plutarch said, £ It is not possible to find in
geometry more difficult and troublesome questions or proofs
set out in simpler and clearer propositions There is at the
1 Plutarch, Marcellus, c. 17.
same time £
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