31.10.2014 Views

A history of Greek mathematics - Wilbourhall.org

A history of Greek mathematics - Wilbourhall.org

A history of Greek mathematics - Wilbourhall.org

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

THE MECHANICS 347<br />

the first chapter or chapters <strong>of</strong> the real Mechanics which had<br />

been lost. The treatise would doubtless begin with generalities<br />

introductory to mechanics such as we find in the (much<br />

interpolated) beginning <strong>of</strong> Pappus, Book VIII. It must then<br />

apparently have dealt with the properties <strong>of</strong> circles, cylinders,<br />

and spheres with reference to their importance in mechanics ;<br />

for in Book II. 21 Heron says that the circle is <strong>of</strong> all figures<br />

the most movable and most easily moved, the same thing<br />

applying also to the cylinder and sphere, and he adds in<br />

support <strong>of</strong> this a reference to a pro<strong>of</strong> in the preceding Book '<br />

'.<br />

This reference may be to I.<br />

21, but at the end <strong>of</strong> that chapter<br />

he says that 'cylinders, even when heavy, if placed on the<br />

ground so that they touch it in one line only, are easily<br />

moved, and the same is true <strong>of</strong> spheres also, a matter which<br />

we have already discussed ' ; the discussion may have come<br />

earlier in the Book, in a chapter now lost.<br />

The treatise, beginning with chap. 2 after the passage<br />

interpolated from the BapovXitos, is curiously disconnected.<br />

Chaps. 2-7 discuss the motion <strong>of</strong> circles or wheels, equal or<br />

unequal, moving on different axes (e.g. interacting toothed<br />

wheels), or fixed on the same axis, much after the fashion <strong>of</strong><br />

the Aristotelian Mechanical problems.<br />

Aristotle s<br />

Wheel.<br />

In particular (chap. 7) Heron attempts to explain the puzzle<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Wheel <strong>of</strong> Aristotle ' ', which remained a puzzle up to quite<br />

modern times, and gave rise to the proverb, rotam Aristotelis<br />

'<br />

magis torquere, quo magis torqueretur \ l '<br />

The question is ', says<br />

the Aristotelian problem 24, ' why does the greater circle roll an<br />

equal distance with the lesser circle when they are placed about<br />

the same centre, whereas, when they roll separately, as the<br />

size <strong>of</strong> one is to the size <strong>of</strong> the other, so are the straight lines<br />

traversed by them to one another V 2 Let AC, BD be quadrants<br />

<strong>of</strong> circles with centre bounded by the same radii, and draw<br />

tangents AE, BF at A and B. In the first case suppose the<br />

circle BD to roll along BF till<br />

D takes the position H\ then<br />

the radius ODC will be at right angles to AE, and C will be<br />

at G, a point such that AG is equal to BH. In the second<br />

1<br />

2<br />

See Van Capelle, Aristotelis quaestiones mechanicae, 1812, p. 263 sq.<br />

Avist. Mechanica, 855 a 28.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!