fbpx
Wikipedia

Eudoxus of Cnidus

Eudoxus of Cnidus (/ˈjuːdəksəs/; Ancient Greek: Εὔδοξος ὁ Κνίδιος, Eúdoxos ho Knídios; c. 408 – c. 355 BC[1][2]) was an ancient Greek astronomer, mathematician, scholar, and student of Archytas and Plato. All of his original works are lost, though some fragments are preserved in Hipparchus' commentary on Aratus's poem on astronomy.[3] Sphaerics by Theodosius of Bithynia may be based on a work by Eudoxus.

Eudoxus of Cnidus
Bornc. 400 BC[1]
Knidos, Asia Minor
(now Yazıköy, Muğla, Turkey)
Diedc. 350 BC[1]
Knidos, Asia Minor
Known forKampyle of Eudoxus
Concentric spheres
Scientific career
Fields

Life

Eudoxus was born and died in Cnidus (also spelled Knidos),[2] which was a city on the southwest coast of Asia Minor. The years of Eudoxus' birth and death are not fully known but the range may have been c. 408 – c. 355 BC,[1][2] or c. 390 – c. 337 BC. His name Eudoxus means "honored" or "of good repute" (εὔδοξος, from eu "good" and doxa "opinion, belief, fame"). It is analogous to the Latin name Benedictus.

Eudoxus's father, Aeschines of Cnidus, loved to watch stars at night. Eudoxus first traveled to Tarentum to study with Archytas, from whom he learned mathematics. While in Italy, Eudoxus visited Sicily, where he studied medicine with Philiston.

At the age of 23, he traveled with the physician Theomedon—who (according to Diogenes Laërtius) some believed was his lover[4]—to Athens to study with the followers of Socrates. He eventually attended lectures of Plato and other philosophers for several months, but due to a disagreement they had a falling-out. Eudoxus was quite poor and could only afford an apartment at Piraeus. To attend Plato's lectures, he walked the 7 miles (11 km) in each direction each day. Due to his poverty, his friends raised funds sufficient to send him to Heliopolis, Egypt, to pursue his study of astronomy and mathematics. He lived there for 16 months. From Egypt, he then traveled north to Cyzicus, located on the south shore of the Sea of Marmara, the Propontis. He traveled south to the court of Mausolus. During his travels he gathered many students of his own.[citation needed]

Around 368 BC, Eudoxus returned to Athens with his students. According to some sources,[citation needed] around 367 he assumed headship (scholarch) of the Academy during Plato's period in Syracuse, and taught Aristotle.[citation needed] He eventually returned to his native Cnidus, where he served in the city assembly. While in Cnidus, he built an observatory and continued writing and lecturing on theology, astronomy, and meteorology. He had one son, Aristagoras, and three daughters, Actis, Philtis, and Delphis.

In mathematical astronomy, his fame is due to the introduction of the concentric spheres, and his early contributions to understanding the movement of the planets.

His work on proportions shows insight into real numbers; it allows rigorous treatment of continuous quantities and not just whole numbers or even rational numbers. When it was revived by Tartaglia and others in the 16th century, it became the basis for quantitative work in science, and inspired the work of Richard Dedekind.[5]

Craters on Mars and the Moon are named in his honor. An algebraic curve (the Kampyle of Eudoxus) is also named after him.

Mathematics

Eudoxus is considered by some to be the greatest of classical Greek mathematicians, and in all Antiquity second only to Archimedes.[6] Eudoxus was probably the source for most of book V of Euclid's Elements.[7] He rigorously developed Antiphon's method of exhaustion, a precursor to the integral calculus which was also used in a masterly way by Archimedes in the following century. In applying the method, Eudoxus proved such mathematical statements as: areas of circles are to one another as the squares of their radii, volumes of spheres are to one another as the cubes of their radii, the volume of a pyramid is one-third the volume of a prism with the same base and altitude, and the volume of a cone is one-third that of the corresponding cylinder.[8]

Eudoxus introduced the idea of non-quantified mathematical magnitude to describe and work with continuous geometrical entities such as lines, angles, areas and volumes, thereby avoiding the use of irrational numbers. In doing so, he reversed a Pythagorean emphasis on number and arithmetic, focusing instead on geometrical concepts as the basis of rigorous mathematics. Some Pythagoreans, such as Eudoxus's teacher Archytas, had believed that only arithmetic could provide a basis for proofs. Induced by the need to understand and operate with incommensurable quantities, Eudoxus established what may have been the first deductive organization of mathematics on the basis of explicit axioms. The change in focus by Eudoxus stimulated a divide in mathematics which lasted two thousand years. In combination with a Greek intellectual attitude unconcerned with practical problems, there followed a significant retreat from the development of techniques in arithmetic and algebra.[8]

The Pythagoreans had discovered that the diagonal of a square does not have a common unit of measurement with the sides of the square; this is the famous discovery that the square root of 2 cannot be expressed as the ratio of two integers. This discovery had heralded the existence of incommensurable quantities beyond the integers and rational fractions, but at the same time it threw into question the idea of measurement and calculations in geometry as a whole. For example, Euclid provides an elaborate proof of the Pythagorean theorem (Elements I.47), by using addition of areas and only much later (Elements VI.31) a simpler proof from similar triangles, which relies on ratios of line segments.

Ancient Greek mathematicians calculated not with quantities and equations as we do today, but instead they used proportionalities to express the relationship between quantities. Thus the ratio of two similar quantities was not just a numerical value, as we think of it today; the ratio of two similar quantities was a primitive relationship between them.

Eudoxus was able to restore confidence in the use of proportionalities by providing an astounding definition for the meaning of the equality between two ratios. This definition of proportion forms the subject of Euclid's Book V.

In Definition 5 of Euclid's Book V we read:

Magnitudes are said to be in the same ratio, the first to the second and the third to the fourth when, if any equimultiples whatever be taken of the first and third, and any equimultiples whatever of the second and fourth, the former equimultiples alike exceed, are alike equal to, or alike fall short of, the latter equimultiples respectively taken in corresponding order.

By using modern-day notation, this is clarified as follows. If we take four quantities: a, b, c, and d, then the first and second have a ratio  ; similarly the third and fourth have a ratio  .

Now to say that   we do the following: For any two arbitrary integers, m and n, form the equimultiples m·a and m·c of the first and third; likewise form the equimultiples n·b and n·d of the second and fourth.

If it happens that m·a > n·b, then we must also have m·c > n·d. If it happens that m·a = n·b, then we must also have m·c = n·d. Finally, if it happens that m·a < n·b, then we must also have m·c < n·d.

Notice that the definition depends on comparing the similar quantities m·a and n·b, and the similar quantities m·c and n·d, and does not depend on the existence of a common unit of measuring these quantities.

The complexity of the definition reflects the deep conceptual and methodological innovation involved. It brings to mind the famous fifth postulate of Euclid concerning parallels, which is more extensive and complicated in its wording than the other postulates.

The Eudoxian definition of proportionality uses the quantifier, "for every ..." to harness the infinite and the infinitesimal, just as do the modern epsilon-delta definitions of limit and continuity.

Additionally, the Archimedean property stated as definition 4 of Euclid's book V is originally due not to Archimedes but to Eudoxus.[9]

Astronomy

In ancient Greece, astronomy was a branch of mathematics; astronomers sought to create geometrical models that could imitate the appearances of celestial motions. Identifying the astronomical work of Eudoxus as a separate category is therefore a modern convenience. Some of Eudoxus's astronomical texts whose names have survived include:

  • Disappearances of the Sun, possibly on eclipses
  • Oktaeteris (Ὀκταετηρίς), on an eight-year lunisolar-Venus cycle of the calendar
  • Phaenomena (Φαινόμενα) and Enoptron (Ἔνοπτρον), on spherical astronomy, probably based on observations made by Eudoxus in Egypt and Cnidus
  • On Speeds, on planetary motions

We are fairly well informed about the contents of Phaenomena, for Eudoxus's prose text was the basis for a poem of the same name by Aratus. Hipparchus quoted from the text of Eudoxus in his commentary on Aratus.

Eudoxan planetary models

A general idea of the content of On Speeds can be gleaned from Aristotle's Metaphysics XII, 8, and a commentary by Simplicius of Cilicia (6th century AD) on De caelo, another work by Aristotle. According to a story reported by Simplicius, Plato posed a question for Greek astronomers: "By the assumption of what uniform and orderly motions can the apparent motions of the planets be accounted for?"[10] Plato proposed that the seemingly chaotic wandering motions of the planets could be explained by combinations of uniform circular motions centered on a spherical Earth, apparently a novel idea in the 4th century BC.

In most modern reconstructions of the Eudoxan model, the Moon is assigned three spheres:

  • The outermost rotates westward once in 24 hours, explaining rising and setting.
  • The second rotates eastward once in a month, explaining the monthly motion of the Moon through the zodiac.
  • The third also completes its revolution in a month, but its axis is tilted at a slightly different angle, explaining motion in latitude (deviation from the ecliptic), and the motion of the lunar nodes.

The Sun is also assigned three spheres. The second completes its motion in a year instead of a month. The inclusion of a third sphere implies that Eudoxus mistakenly believed that the Sun had motion in latitude.

 
Animation depicting Eudoxus's model of retrograde planetary motion. The two innermost homocentric spheres of his model are represented as rings here, each turning with the same period but in opposite directions, moving the planet along a figure-eight curve, or hippopede.
 
Eudoxus's model of planetary motion. Each of his homocentric spheres is represented here as a ring which rotates on the axis shown. The outermost (yellow) sphere rotates once per day; the second (blue) describes the planet's motion through the zodiac; the third (green) and fourth (red) together move the planet along a figure-eight curve (or hippopede) to explain retrograde motion.

The five visible planets (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn) are assigned four spheres each:

  • The outermost explains the daily motion.
  • The second explains the planet's motion through the zodiac.
  • The third and fourth together explain retrogradation, when a planet appears to slow down, then briefly reverse its motion through the zodiac. By inclining the axes of the two spheres with respect to each other, and rotating them in opposite directions but with equal periods, Eudoxus could make a point on the inner sphere trace out a figure-eight shape, or hippopede.

Importance of Eudoxan system

Callippus, a Greek astronomer of the 4th century, added seven spheres to Eudoxus's original 27 (in addition to the planetary spheres, Eudoxus included a sphere for the fixed stars). Aristotle described both systems, but insisted on adding "unrolling" spheres between each set of spheres to cancel the motions of the outer set. Aristotle was concerned about the physical nature of the system; without unrollers, the outer motions would be transferred to the inner planets.

A major flaw in the Eudoxian system is its inability to explain changes in the brightness of planets as seen from Earth. Because the spheres are concentric, planets will always remain at the same distance from Earth. This problem was pointed out in Antiquity by Autolycus of Pitane. Astronomers responded by introducing the deferent and epicycle, which caused a planet to vary its distance. However, Eudoxus's importance to astronomy and in particular to Greek astronomy is considerable.

Ethics

Aristotle, in the Nicomachean Ethics,[11] attributes to Eudoxus an argument in favor of hedonism—that is, that pleasure is the ultimate good that activity strives for. According to Aristotle, Eudoxus put forward the following arguments for this position:

  1. All things, rational and irrational, aim at pleasure; things aim at what they believe to be good; a good indication of what the chief good is would be the thing that most things aim at.
  2. Similarly, pleasure's opposite—pain—is universally avoided, which provides additional support for the idea that pleasure is universally considered good.
  3. People don't seek pleasure as a means to something else, but as an end in its own right.
  4. Any other good that you can think of would be better if pleasure were added to it, and it is only by good that good can be increased.
  5. Of all of the things that are good, happiness is peculiar for not being praised, which may show that it is the crowning good.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Blackburn, Simon (2008). The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy (revised 2nd ed.). Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199541430. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
  2. ^ a b c O'Connor, J. J.; Robertson, E. F. "Eudoxus of Cnidus". University of St Andrews. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
  3. ^ Lasserre, François (1966) Die Fragmente des Eudoxos von Knidos (de Gruyter: Berlin)
  4. ^ Diogenes Laertius; VIII.87
  5. ^ Milenko Nikolić (2012) "The ancient idea of real number in Eudoxus' theory of ratios", page 226, and "The analogy between Eudoxus' theory of ratios and Dedekind's theory of cut", page 238 in For Jan Struik, Cohen-Stachel-Wartofsky editors, Springer books
  6. ^ Calinger, Ronald (1982). Classics of Mathematics. Oak Park, Illinois: Moore Publishing Company, Inc. p. 75. ISBN 0-935610-13-8.
  7. ^ Ball 1908, p. 54.
  8. ^ a b Morris Kline, Mathematical Thought from Ancient to Modern Times Oxford University Press, 1972 pp. 48–50
  9. ^ Knopp, Konrad (1951). Theory and Application of Infinite Series (English 2nd ed.). London and Glasgow: Blackie & Son, Ltd. p. 7.
  10. ^ Lloyd, GER (1970). Early Greek Science: Thales to Aristotle. W.W. Norton. p. 84. ISBN 9780393005837.
  11. ^ Largely in Book Ten.
  12. ^ This particular argument is referenced in Book One.

Bibliography

  • Ball, Walter William Rouse (1908). A Short Account of the History of Mathematics (4th ed.). Dover Publications. ISBN 9780486206301.
  • De Santillana, G. (1968). "Eudoxus and Plato: A Study in Chronology". Reflections on Men and Ideas. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  • Evans, James (1998). The History and Practice of Ancient Astronomy. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509539-1. OCLC 185509676.
  • Huxley, GL (1980). Eudoxus of Cnidus p. 465-7 in: the Dictionary of Scientific Biography, volume 4.
  • Huxley, G. L. (1963). "Eudoxian Topics". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 4: 83–96.
  • Knorr, Wilbur Richard (1978). "Archimedes and the Pre-Euclidean Proportion Theory". Archives Internationales d'Histoire des Sciences. 28: 183–244.
  • Knorr, Wilbur R. (1986). The Ancient tradition of geometric problems. Boston: Birkhäuser. ISBN 0-8176-3148-8.
  • Lasserre, François (1966) Die Fragmente des Eudoxos von Knidos (de Gruyter: Berlin)
  •   Laërtius, Diogenes (1925). "Pythagoreans: Eudoxus" . Lives of the Eminent Philosophers. Vol. 2:8. Translated by Hicks, Robert Drew (Two volume ed.). Loeb Classical Library.
  • Manitius, C. (1894) Hipparchi in Arati et Eudoxi Phaenomena Commentariorum Libri Tres (Teubner)
  • Neugebauer, O. (1975). A history of ancient mathematical astronomy. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-06995-X.
  • Van der Waerden, B. L. (1988). Science Awakening (5th ed.). Leiden: Noordhoff.

External links

  • Working model and complete explanation of the Eudoxus's Spheres
  • Eudoxus (and Plato), a documentary on Eudoxus, including a description of his planetary model
  • Dennis Duke, "Statistical dating of the Phaenomena of Eudoxus", DIO, volume 15 see pages 7 to 23
  • Eudoxus of Cnidus Britannica.com
  • Eudoxus of Cnidus Donald Allen, Professor, Texas A&M University
  • Henry Mendell, Cal State U, LA
  • Herodotus Project: Extensive B+W photo essay of Cnidus
  • , Craig McConnell, Ph.D., Cal State, Fullerton
  • O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Eudoxus of Cnidus", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews
  • (Java applet)

eudoxus, cnidus, confused, with, eudoxus, cyzicus, juː, ancient, greek, Εὔδοξος, Κνίδιος, eúdoxos, knídios, ancient, greek, astronomer, mathematician, scholar, student, archytas, plato, original, works, lost, though, some, fragments, preserved, hipparchus, com. Not to be confused with Eudoxus of Cyzicus Eudoxus of Cnidus ˈ juː d e k s e s Ancient Greek Eὔdo3os ὁ Knidios Eudoxos ho Knidios c 408 c 355 BC 1 2 was an ancient Greek astronomer mathematician scholar and student of Archytas and Plato All of his original works are lost though some fragments are preserved in Hipparchus commentary on Aratus s poem on astronomy 3 Sphaerics by Theodosius of Bithynia may be based on a work by Eudoxus Eudoxus of CnidusBornc 400 BC 1 Knidos Asia Minor now Yazikoy Mugla Turkey Diedc 350 BC 1 Knidos Asia MinorKnown forKampyle of EudoxusConcentric spheresScientific careerFieldsMathematicsPhysicsGeographyAstronomyMedicinePhilosophy Contents 1 Life 2 Mathematics 3 Astronomy 3 1 Eudoxan planetary models 3 2 Importance of Eudoxan system 4 Ethics 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksLife EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Eudoxus was born and died in Cnidus also spelled Knidos 2 which was a city on the southwest coast of Asia Minor The years of Eudoxus birth and death are not fully known but the range may have been c 408 c 355 BC 1 2 or c 390 c 337 BC His name Eudoxus means honored or of good repute eὔdo3os from eu good and doxa opinion belief fame It is analogous to the Latin name Benedictus Eudoxus s father Aeschines of Cnidus loved to watch stars at night Eudoxus first traveled to Tarentum to study with Archytas from whom he learned mathematics While in Italy Eudoxus visited Sicily where he studied medicine with Philiston At the age of 23 he traveled with the physician Theomedon who according to Diogenes Laertius some believed was his lover 4 to Athens to study with the followers of Socrates He eventually attended lectures of Plato and other philosophers for several months but due to a disagreement they had a falling out Eudoxus was quite poor and could only afford an apartment at Piraeus To attend Plato s lectures he walked the 7 miles 11 km in each direction each day Due to his poverty his friends raised funds sufficient to send him to Heliopolis Egypt to pursue his study of astronomy and mathematics He lived there for 16 months From Egypt he then traveled north to Cyzicus located on the south shore of the Sea of Marmara the Propontis He traveled south to the court of Mausolus During his travels he gathered many students of his own citation needed Around 368 BC Eudoxus returned to Athens with his students According to some sources citation needed around 367 he assumed headship scholarch of the Academy during Plato s period in Syracuse and taught Aristotle citation needed He eventually returned to his native Cnidus where he served in the city assembly While in Cnidus he built an observatory and continued writing and lecturing on theology astronomy and meteorology He had one son Aristagoras and three daughters Actis Philtis and Delphis In mathematical astronomy his fame is due to the introduction of the concentric spheres and his early contributions to understanding the movement of the planets His work on proportions shows insight into real numbers it allows rigorous treatment of continuous quantities and not just whole numbers or even rational numbers When it was revived by Tartaglia and others in the 16th century it became the basis for quantitative work in science and inspired the work of Richard Dedekind 5 Craters on Mars and the Moon are named in his honor An algebraic curve the Kampyle of Eudoxus is also named after him Mathematics EditEudoxus is considered by some to be the greatest of classical Greek mathematicians and in all Antiquity second only to Archimedes 6 Eudoxus was probably the source for most of book V of Euclid s Elements 7 He rigorously developed Antiphon s method of exhaustion a precursor to the integral calculus which was also used in a masterly way by Archimedes in the following century In applying the method Eudoxus proved such mathematical statements as areas of circles are to one another as the squares of their radii volumes of spheres are to one another as the cubes of their radii the volume of a pyramid is one third the volume of a prism with the same base and altitude and the volume of a cone is one third that of the corresponding cylinder 8 Eudoxus introduced the idea of non quantified mathematical magnitude to describe and work with continuous geometrical entities such as lines angles areas and volumes thereby avoiding the use of irrational numbers In doing so he reversed a Pythagorean emphasis on number and arithmetic focusing instead on geometrical concepts as the basis of rigorous mathematics Some Pythagoreans such as Eudoxus s teacher Archytas had believed that only arithmetic could provide a basis for proofs Induced by the need to understand and operate with incommensurable quantities Eudoxus established what may have been the first deductive organization of mathematics on the basis of explicit axioms The change in focus by Eudoxus stimulated a divide in mathematics which lasted two thousand years In combination with a Greek intellectual attitude unconcerned with practical problems there followed a significant retreat from the development of techniques in arithmetic and algebra 8 The Pythagoreans had discovered that the diagonal of a square does not have a common unit of measurement with the sides of the square this is the famous discovery that the square root of 2 cannot be expressed as the ratio of two integers This discovery had heralded the existence of incommensurable quantities beyond the integers and rational fractions but at the same time it threw into question the idea of measurement and calculations in geometry as a whole For example Euclid provides an elaborate proof of the Pythagorean theorem Elements I 47 by using addition of areas and only much later Elements VI 31 a simpler proof from similar triangles which relies on ratios of line segments Ancient Greek mathematicians calculated not with quantities and equations as we do today but instead they used proportionalities to express the relationship between quantities Thus the ratio of two similar quantities was not just a numerical value as we think of it today the ratio of two similar quantities was a primitive relationship between them Eudoxus was able to restore confidence in the use of proportionalities by providing an astounding definition for the meaning of the equality between two ratios This definition of proportion forms the subject of Euclid s Book V In Definition 5 of Euclid s Book V we read Magnitudes are said to be in the same ratio the first to the second and the third to the fourth when if any equimultiples whatever be taken of the first and third and any equimultiples whatever of the second and fourth the former equimultiples alike exceed are alike equal to or alike fall short of the latter equimultiples respectively taken in corresponding order By using modern day notation this is clarified as follows If we take four quantities a b c and d then the first and second have a ratio a b displaystyle a b similarly the third and fourth have a ratio c d displaystyle c d Now to say that a b c d displaystyle a b c d we do the following For any two arbitrary integers m and n form the equimultiples m a and m c of the first and third likewise form the equimultiples n b and n d of the second and fourth If it happens that m a gt n b then we must also have m c gt n d If it happens that m a n b then we must also have m c n d Finally if it happens that m a lt n b then we must also have m c lt n d Notice that the definition depends on comparing the similar quantities m a and n b and the similar quantities m c and n d and does not depend on the existence of a common unit of measuring these quantities The complexity of the definition reflects the deep conceptual and methodological innovation involved It brings to mind the famous fifth postulate of Euclid concerning parallels which is more extensive and complicated in its wording than the other postulates The Eudoxian definition of proportionality uses the quantifier for every to harness the infinite and the infinitesimal just as do the modern epsilon delta definitions of limit and continuity Additionally the Archimedean property stated as definition 4 of Euclid s book V is originally due not to Archimedes but to Eudoxus 9 Astronomy EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In ancient Greece astronomy was a branch of mathematics astronomers sought to create geometrical models that could imitate the appearances of celestial motions Identifying the astronomical work of Eudoxus as a separate category is therefore a modern convenience Some of Eudoxus s astronomical texts whose names have survived include Disappearances of the Sun possibly on eclipses Oktaeteris Ὀktaethris on an eight year lunisolar Venus cycle of the calendar Phaenomena Fainomena and Enoptron Ἔnoptron on spherical astronomy probably based on observations made by Eudoxus in Egypt and Cnidus On Speeds on planetary motionsWe are fairly well informed about the contents of Phaenomena for Eudoxus s prose text was the basis for a poem of the same name by Aratus Hipparchus quoted from the text of Eudoxus in his commentary on Aratus Eudoxan planetary models Edit Main article Concentric spheres A general idea of the content of On Speeds can be gleaned from Aristotle s Metaphysics XII 8 and a commentary by Simplicius of Cilicia 6th century AD on De caelo another work by Aristotle According to a story reported by Simplicius Plato posed a question for Greek astronomers By the assumption of what uniform and orderly motions can the apparent motions of the planets be accounted for 10 Plato proposed that the seemingly chaotic wandering motions of the planets could be explained by combinations of uniform circular motions centered on a spherical Earth apparently a novel idea in the 4th century BC In most modern reconstructions of the Eudoxan model the Moon is assigned three spheres The outermost rotates westward once in 24 hours explaining rising and setting The second rotates eastward once in a month explaining the monthly motion of the Moon through the zodiac The third also completes its revolution in a month but its axis is tilted at a slightly different angle explaining motion in latitude deviation from the ecliptic and the motion of the lunar nodes The Sun is also assigned three spheres The second completes its motion in a year instead of a month The inclusion of a third sphere implies that Eudoxus mistakenly believed that the Sun had motion in latitude Animation depicting Eudoxus s model of retrograde planetary motion The two innermost homocentric spheres of his model are represented as rings here each turning with the same period but in opposite directions moving the planet along a figure eight curve or hippopede Eudoxus s model of planetary motion Each of his homocentric spheres is represented here as a ring which rotates on the axis shown The outermost yellow sphere rotates once per day the second blue describes the planet s motion through the zodiac the third green and fourth red together move the planet along a figure eight curve or hippopede to explain retrograde motion The five visible planets Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter and Saturn are assigned four spheres each The outermost explains the daily motion The second explains the planet s motion through the zodiac The third and fourth together explain retrogradation when a planet appears to slow down then briefly reverse its motion through the zodiac By inclining the axes of the two spheres with respect to each other and rotating them in opposite directions but with equal periods Eudoxus could make a point on the inner sphere trace out a figure eight shape or hippopede Importance of Eudoxan system Edit Callippus a Greek astronomer of the 4th century added seven spheres to Eudoxus s original 27 in addition to the planetary spheres Eudoxus included a sphere for the fixed stars Aristotle described both systems but insisted on adding unrolling spheres between each set of spheres to cancel the motions of the outer set Aristotle was concerned about the physical nature of the system without unrollers the outer motions would be transferred to the inner planets A major flaw in the Eudoxian system is its inability to explain changes in the brightness of planets as seen from Earth Because the spheres are concentric planets will always remain at the same distance from Earth This problem was pointed out in Antiquity by Autolycus of Pitane Astronomers responded by introducing the deferent and epicycle which caused a planet to vary its distance However Eudoxus s importance to astronomy and in particular to Greek astronomy is considerable Ethics EditAristotle in the Nicomachean Ethics 11 attributes to Eudoxus an argument in favor of hedonism that is that pleasure is the ultimate good that activity strives for According to Aristotle Eudoxus put forward the following arguments for this position All things rational and irrational aim at pleasure things aim at what they believe to be good a good indication of what the chief good is would be the thing that most things aim at Similarly pleasure s opposite pain is universally avoided which provides additional support for the idea that pleasure is universally considered good People don t seek pleasure as a means to something else but as an end in its own right Any other good that you can think of would be better if pleasure were added to it and it is only by good that good can be increased Of all of the things that are good happiness is peculiar for not being praised which may show that it is the crowning good 12 See also EditEuclid Euclid s Elements Eudoxus reals a fairly recently discovered construction of the real numbers named in his honor Delian problem Incommensurable magnitudes SpeusippusReferences Edit a b c d Blackburn Simon 2008 The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy revised 2nd ed Oxford United Kingdom Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199541430 Retrieved 30 November 2020 a b c O Connor J J Robertson E F Eudoxus of Cnidus University of St Andrews Retrieved 30 November 2020 Lasserre Francois 1966 Die Fragmente des Eudoxos von Knidos de Gruyter Berlin Diogenes Laertius VIII 87 Milenko Nikolic 2012 The ancient idea of real number in Eudoxus theory of ratios page 226 and The analogy between Eudoxus theory of ratios and Dedekind s theory of cut page 238 in For Jan Struik Cohen Stachel Wartofsky editors Springer books Calinger Ronald 1982 Classics of Mathematics Oak Park Illinois Moore Publishing Company Inc p 75 ISBN 0 935610 13 8 Ball 1908 p 54 a b Morris Kline Mathematical Thought from Ancient to Modern Times Oxford University Press 1972 pp 48 50 Knopp Konrad 1951 Theory and Application of Infinite Series English 2nd ed London and Glasgow Blackie amp Son Ltd p 7 Lloyd GER 1970 Early Greek Science Thales to Aristotle W W Norton p 84 ISBN 9780393005837 Largely in Book Ten This particular argument is referenced in Book One Bibliography EditBall Walter William Rouse 1908 A Short Account of the History of Mathematics 4th ed Dover Publications ISBN 9780486206301 De Santillana G 1968 Eudoxus and Plato A Study in Chronology Reflections on Men and Ideas Cambridge MA MIT Press Evans James 1998 The History and Practice of Ancient Astronomy Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 509539 1 OCLC 185509676 Huxley GL 1980 Eudoxus of Cnidusp 465 7 in the Dictionary of Scientific Biography volume 4 Huxley G L 1963 Eudoxian Topics Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 4 83 96 Knorr Wilbur Richard 1978 Archimedes and the Pre Euclidean Proportion Theory Archives Internationales d Histoire des Sciences 28 183 244 Knorr Wilbur R 1986 The Ancient tradition of geometric problems Boston Birkhauser ISBN 0 8176 3148 8 Lasserre Francois 1966 Die Fragmente des Eudoxos von Knidos de Gruyter Berlin Laertius Diogenes 1925 Pythagoreans Eudoxus Lives of the Eminent Philosophers Vol 2 8 Translated by Hicks Robert Drew Two volume ed Loeb Classical Library Manitius C 1894 Hipparchi in Arati et Eudoxi Phaenomena Commentariorum Libri Tres Teubner Neugebauer O 1975 A history of ancient mathematical astronomy Berlin Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 06995 X Van der Waerden B L 1988 Science Awakening 5th ed Leiden Noordhoff External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eudoxus of Cnidus Working model and complete explanation of the Eudoxus s Spheres Eudoxus and Plato a documentary on Eudoxus including a description of his planetary model Dennis Duke Statistical dating of the Phaenomena of Eudoxus DIO volume 15 see pages 7 to 23 Eudoxus of Cnidus Britannica com Eudoxus of Cnidus Donald Allen Professor Texas A amp M University Eudoxos of Knidos Eudoxus of Cnidus astronomy and homocentric spheres Henry Mendell Cal State U LA Herodotus Project Extensive B W photo essay of Cnidus Models of Planetary Motion Eudoxus Craig McConnell Ph D Cal State Fullerton O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Eudoxus of Cnidus MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews The Universe According to Eudoxus Java applet Portals Biography Greece Mathematics Astronomy Stars Spaceflight Outer space Solar System Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eudoxus of Cnidus amp oldid 1137489333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.