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Archimedes
(b. c. 290–280
BCE, Syracuse, Sicily [now in Italy]—d. 212/211 BCE,
Syracuse)
The most famous mathematician of ancient
Greece,
Archimedes is especially important for his discovery
of the relation between the surface and volume of a sphere and its
circumscribing cylinder and for his formulation of a hydrostatic principle
(known as Archimedes’ principle). As an inventor he is known for various
ingenious (and perhaps mythical) optical and mechanical devices, including a
device for raising water, still used in developing countries, known as the
Archimedes screw.
Archimedes probably spent some time in Egypt early in his
career, but he resided for most of his life in Syracuse, the principal Greek
city-state in Sicily, where he was on intimate terms with its king, Hieron II.
Archimedes published his works in the form of correspondence with the principal
mathematicians of his time, including the Alexandrian scholars Conon of Samos and
Eratosthenes of Cyrene. He played an important role in the defense of Syracuse
against the siege laid by the Romans in 213 BCE by constructing war machines so
effective that they long delayed the capture of the city. When Syracuse
eventually fell to the Roman general Marcus Claudius Marcellus in the autumn of
212 or spring of 211 BCE, Archimedes was killed in the sack of the city.
Far more details survive about the life of Archimedes than
about any other ancient scientist, but they are largely anecdotal, reflecting
the impression that his mechanical genius made on the popular imagination.
Thus, he is credited with inventing the Archimedes screw, and he is supposed to
have made two “spheres” that Marcellus took back to Rome—one a star globe and
the other a device (the details of which are uncertain) for mechanically
representing the motions of the Sun, the Moon, and the planets. The story that
he determined the proportion of gold and silver in a wreath made for Hieron by
weighing it in water is probably true, but the version that has him leaping
from the bath in which he supposedly got the idea and running naked through the
streets shouting “Heurēka!” (“I have found it!”) is popular embellishment.
Equally apocryphal are the stories that he used a huge array of mirrors to burn
the Roman ships besieging Syracuse; that he said, “Give me a place to stand and
I will move the Earth”; and that a Roman soldier killed him because he refused
to leave his mathematical diagrams—although all are popular reflections of his
real interest in catoptrics (the branch of optics dealing with the reflection
of light from mirrors, plane or curved), mechanics, and pure mathematics.
According to Plutarch (c.
46–119 CE), Archimedes had so low an opinion of the kind of practical invention
at which he excelled and to which he owed his contemporary fame that he left no
written work on such subjects. While it is true that—apart from a dubious
reference to a treatise, “On Sphere-Making”—all of his known works were of a
theoretical character, his interest in mechanics nevertheless deeply influenced
his mathematical thinking. Not only did he write works on theoretical mechanics
and hydrostatics, but his treatise Method
Concerning Mechanical Theorems shows that he used mechanical reasoning as a
heuristic device for the discovery of new mathematical theorems.
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