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| Fragments of the Books on Arithmetic. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Fragments
of the Books on Arithmetic.1194
1194
Fabricius, Biblioth. Græca, ed. Harles, vol. iii. p.
462. Hamburg, 1793. |
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What is mathematics?
Aristotle thinks that all philosophy consisted of
theory and practice,1195
1195
θεωρίας
καὶ
πράξεως. |
and divides the practical into ethical and political, and the theoretic
again into the theological, the physical, and the mathematical.
And thus very clearly and skilfully he shows that mathematics is (a
branch of) philosophy.
The Chaldæans were the originators of astronomy,
and the Egyptians of geometry and arithmetic.…
And whence did mathematics derive its name?
Those of the Peripatetic school affirmed that in
rhetoric and poetry, and in the popular music, any one may be an adept
though he has gone through no process of study; but that in those
pursuits properly called studies,1196 none can have any real knowledge unless he
has first become a student of them. Hence they supposed that the
theory of these things was called Mathematics, from
μάθημα, study,
science. And the followers of Pythagoras are said to have given
this more distinctive name of mathematics to geometry, and arithmetic
alone. For of old these had each its own separate name; and they
had up till then no name common to both. And he (Archytas) gave
them this name, because he found science1197 in them, and that in a manner suitable to
man’s study.1198 For they (the Pythagoreans)
perceived that these studies dealt with things eternal and immutable
and perfect,1199
1199
εἰλικρινῆ, absolute. | in which things
alone they considered that science consisted. But the more recent
philosophers have given a more extensive application to this name, so
that, in their opinion, the mathematician deals not only with
substances1200 incorporeal, and
falling simply within the province of the understanding,1201 but also with that
which touches upon corporeal and sensible matter. For he ought to
be cognisant of1202 the course of
the stars, and their velocity, and their magnitudes, and forms, and
distances. And, besides, he ought to investigate their
dispositions to vision, examining into the causes, why they are not
seen as of the same form and of the same size from every distance,
retaining, indeed, as we know them to do, their dispositions relative
to each other,1203
1203
τοὺς
πρὸς ἄλληλα
λόγους. | but producing,
at the same time, deceptive appearances, both in respect of order and
position. And these are so, either as determined by the state of
the heavens and the air, or as seen in reflecting and all polished
surfaces and in transparent bodies, and in all similar kinds. In
addition to this, they thought that the man ought to be versed in
mechanics and geometry and dialectics. And still further, that he
should engage himself with the causes of the harmonious combination of
sounds, and with the composition of music; which things are
bodies,1204 or at least are to
be ultimately referred to sensible matter.
What is mathematics?
Mathematics is a theoretic science1205 of things
apprehensible by perception and sensation for communication to
others.1206
1206
πρὸς
τὴν τῶν
ὑποπιπτόντων
δόσιν. | And before
this a certain person indulging in a joke, while hitting his mark, said
that mathematics is that science to which Homer’s description of
Discord may be applied.—
“Small at her birth, but rising every hour,
While scarce the skies her horrid (mighty) head can
bound,
She stalks on earth and shakes the world
around.”1207
1207
Iliad, iv. 442–443 (Pope). |
For it begins with a point and a line,1208
1208
σημείου
καὶ
γραμμῆς. | and forthwith it takes heaven itself and
all things within its compass.
How many divisions are there of mathematics?
Of the more notable and the earliest mathematics
there are two principal divisions, viz., arithmetic and geometry.
And of the mathematics which deals with things sensible there are six
divisions, viz., computation (practical arithmetic), geodesy, optics,
theoretical music, mechanics, and astronomy. But that neither the
so-called tactics nor architecture,1209 nor the popular music, nor physics, nor the
art which is called equivocally the mechanical, constitutes, as some
think, a branch of mathematics, we shall prove, as the discourse
proceeds, clearly and systematically.
As to the circle having eight solids and six superficies
and four angles.…What branches of arithmetic have closest
affinity with each other? Computation and theoretical music have
a closer affinity than others
with arithmetic; for this department, being one also of quantity and
ratio, approaches it in number and proportion.1210 Optics and geodesy, again, are more in
affinity with geometry. And mechanics and astrology are in
general affinity with both.
As to mathematics having its principles1211 in hypothesis and
about hypothesis. Now, the term hypothesis is used in three ways,
or indeed in many ways. For according to one usage of the term we
have the dramatic revolution;1212
1212
περιπέτεια,
reversal of circumstances on which the plot of a tragedy hinges. |
and in this sense there are said to be hypotheses in the dramas of
Euripides. According to a second meaning, we have the
investigation of matters in the special in rhetoric; and in this sense
the Sophists say that a hypothesis must be proposed. And,
according to a third signification, the beginning of a proof is called
a hypothesis, as being the begging of certain matters with a view to
the establishment of another in question. Thus it is said that
Democritus1213
1213
A native of Abdera, in Thrace, born about 460 b.c., and, along with Leucippus, the founder of the
philosophical theory of atoms, according to which the creation of all
things was explained as being due to the fortuitous combination of an
infinite number of atoms floating in infinite space. | used a
hypothesis, namely, that of atoms and a vacuum; and
Asclepiades1214
1214
A famous physician, a native of Bithynia, but long resident in
great repute at Rome in the middle of the first century b.c. He adopted the Epicurean doctrine of atoms and
pores, and tried to form a new theory of disease, on the principle that
it might be in all cases reduced to obstruction of the pores and
irregular distribution of the atoms. | that of
atoms1215 and pores.
Now, when applied to mathematics, the term hypothesis is to be taken in
the third sense.
That Pythagoras was not the only one who duly
honoured arithmetic, but that his best known disciples did so too,
being wont to say that “all things fit number.”1216
1216
[Wisdom 11.20; Ecclesiasticus 38.29; 42.7" id="vi.iii.iii-p41.1" parsed="|Wis|11|20|0|0;|Sir|38|29|0|0;|Sir|42|7|0|0" osisRef="Bible:Wis.11.20 Bible:Sir.38.29 Bible:Sir.42.7">Wisd. xi. 20; Ecclus. xxxviii. 29 and
xlii. 7.] |
That arithmetic has as its immediate end chiefly
the theory of science,1217
1217
τὴν
ἐπιστημονικὴν
θεωρίαν. |
than which there is no end either greater or nobler. And its
second end is to bring together in one all that is found in determinate
substance.1218
1218
συλλήβδην
καταλαβεῖν
πόσα τῇ
ὡρισμένῃ
οὐσίᾳ
συμβέβηκεν. |
Who among the mathematicians has made any discovery?
Eudemus1219
1219 A
native of Rhodes, a disciple of Aristotle, and editor of his works. |
relates in his Astrologies that Œnopides1220
1220 A
native of Chios, mentioned by Plato in connection with Anaxagoras, and
therefore supposed by some to have been a contemporary of the latter
sage. | found out the circle of the zodiac and the
cycle1221
1221
περίστασιν,
revolution. | of the great
year. And Thales1222
1222 Of
Miletus, one of the sages, and founder of the Ionic school. |
discovered the eclipse of the sun and its period in the tropics in its
constant inequality. And Anaximander1223
1223
Of Miletus, born 610 b.c., the immediate
successor of Thales in the Ionic school of philosophy. | discovered that the earth is poised in
space,1224 and moves round
the axis of the universe. And Anaximenes1225
1225 Of
Miletus, the third in the series of Ionic philosophers. | discovered that the moon has her light
from the sun, and found out also the way in which she suffers
eclipse. And the rest of the mathematicians have also made
additions to these discoveries. We may instance the
facts—that the fixed stars move round the axis passing through
the poles, while the planets remove from each other1226 round the perpendicular axis of the
zodiac; and that the axis of the fixed stars and the planets is the
side of a pentedecagon with four-and-twenty parts.
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