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A HISTORY

OF

GREEK MATHEMATICS

VOLUME I

OF

GREEK MATHEMATICS

BY

SIR THOMAS HEATH

K.C.B., K.C.V.O., F.R.S.

SC.D. CAMB.; HON. D.Sc. OXFORD

HONORARY FELLOW (FORMERLY FELLOW) OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE

. . . An independent world,
Created out of pure intelligence.'

WORDSWORTH.

VOLUME I

FROM THALES TO EUCLID

OXFORD

AT THE CLARENDON PRESS

22 ·H43

V.I

OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
London Edinburgh Glasgow Copenhagen
New York Toronto Melbourne Cape Town
Bombay Calcutta Madras Shanghai

HUMPHREY MILFORD

Publisher to the University

1829

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PREFACE

THE idea may seem quixotic, but it is nevertheless the author's confident hope that this book will give a fresh interest to the story of Greek mathematics in the eyes both of mathematicians and of classical scholars.

For the mathematician the important consideration is that the foundations of mathematics and a great portion of its content are Greek. The Greeks laid down the first principles, invented the methods ab initio, and fixed the terminology. Mathematics in short is a Greek science, whatever new developments modern analysis has brought or may bring.

The interest of the subject for the classical scholar is no doubt of a different kind. Greek mathematics reveals an important aspect of the Greek genius of which the student of Greek culture is apt to lose sight. Most people, when they think of the Greek genius, naturally call to mind its masterpieces in literature and art with their notes of beauty, truth, freedom and humanism. But the Greek, with his insatiable desire to know the true meaning of everything in the universe and to be able to give a rational explanation of it, was just as irresistibly driven to natural science, mathematics, and exact reasoning in general or logic. This austere side of the Greek genius found perhaps its most complete expression in Aristotle. Aristotle would, however, by no means admit that mathematics was divorced from aesthetic; he could conceive, he said, of nothing more beautiful than the objects of mathematics. Plato delighted in geometry and in the wonders of numbers; ἀγεωμέτρητος μηδεὶς εἰσίτω, said the inscription over the door of the Academy. Euclid was a no less typical Greek. Indeed, seeing that so much of Greek is mathematics,

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