402
PAPPUS OF ALEXANDRIA
Eratosthenes’s On means, nor are there any lemmas to these
works except two on the Surface-Loci at the end of the Book,
The contents of the various works, including those of the
lost treatises so far as they can be gathered from Pappus,
have been described in the chapters devoted to their authors,
and need not be further referred to here, except for an
addendum to the account of Apollonius’s Conics which is
remarkable. Pappus has been speaking of the ‘ locus with
respect to three or four lines ’ (which is a conic), and proceeds
to say (p. 678. 26) that we may in like manner have loci with
reference to five or six or even more lines; these had not up
to his time become generally known, though the synthesis
of one of them, not by any means the most obvious, had been
worked out and its utility shown. Suppose that there are
five or six lines, and that p x , p 2 , p z , p 4 , p 5 or p x , p 2 , p 3 , p 4 ,p 5 ,p G
are the lengths of straight lines drawn from a point to meet
the five or six at given angles, then, if in the first case
Pi Pi 2h = ^PiP5 a (where A is a constant ratio and a a given
length), and in the second case p x p % p z — \p 4 p. p 6 , the locus
of the point is in each case a certain curve given in position.
The relation could not be expressed in the same form if
there were more lines than six, because there are only three
dimensions in geometry, although certain recent writers had
allowed themselves to speak of a rectangle multiplied by
a square or a rectangle without giving any intelligible idea of
what they meant by such a thing (is Pappus here alluding to
Heron’s proof of the formula for the area of a triangle in
terms of its sides given on pp. 322-3, above ?). But the system
of compounded ratios enables it to be expressed for any
number of lines thus, — • ——for = A. Pappus
proceeds in language not very clear (p. 680. 30); but the gist
seems to be that the investigation of these curves had not
attracted men of light and leading, as, for instance, the old
geometers and the best writers. Yet there were other impor
tant discoveries still remaining to be made. For himself, he
noticed that everyone in his day was occupied with the elements,
the first principles and the natural origin of the subject-
matter of investigation; ashamed to pursue such topics, he had
himself proved propositions of much more importance and