Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
An extraordinarily large proportion of the subject matter of the writings of Archimedes represents entirely new discoveries of his own. Though his range of subjects was almost encyclopaedic, embracing geometry (plane and solid), arithmetic, mechanics, hydrostatics and astronomy, he was no compiler, no writer of textbooks ; and in this respect he differs even from his great successor Apollonius, whose work, like that of Euclid before him, largely consisted of systematising and generalising the methods used, and the results obtained, in the isolated efforts of earlier geometers. There is in Archimedes no mere working-up of existing materials; his objective is always some new thing, some definite addition to the sum of knowledge, and his complete originality cannot fail to strike any one who reads his works intelligently, without any corroborative evidence such as is found in the introductory letters prefixed to most of them. These introductions, however, are eminently characteristic of the man and of his work; their directness and simplicity, the complete absence of egoism and of any effort to magnify his own achievements by comparison with those of others or by emphasising their failures where he himself succeeded: all these things intensify the same impression. Thus his manner is to state simply what particular discoveries made by his predecessors had suggested to him the possibility of extending them in new directions; e.g. he says that, in connexion with the efforts of earlier geometers to square the circle and other figures, it Occurred to him that no one had endeavoured to square a parabola, and he accordingly attempted the problem and finally solved it.
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