Archimedes
Archimedes
Men of Science
This book is a quite successful attempt at summing up the entire body of work of the great Archimedes. It contains Geometry as well as Mechanics and Hydrostatics.
Book Excerpt
are equal (Eucl. I., 5), (3) that, if two straight lines cut one another, the vertically opposite angles are equal (Eucl. I., 15), (4) that, if two triangles have two angles and one side respectively equal, the triangles are equal in all respects (Eucl. I., 26). He is said (5) to have been the first to inscribe a right-angled triangle in a circle: which must mean that he was the first to discover that the angle in a semicircle is a right angle. He also solved two problems in practical geometry: (1) he showed how to measure the distance from the land of a ship at sea (for this he is said to have used the proposition numbered (4) above), and (2) he measured the heights of pyramids by means of the shadow thrown on the ground (this implies the use of similar triangles in the way that the Egyptians had used them in the construction of pyramids).
After Thales come the Pythagoreans. We are told that the Pythagoreans were the first to use the term [Greek: mathemata] (literally "subjects of instruction
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