Title: In Praise of Pure Reason
1In Praise of Pure Reason
- How the Greeks Deduced the Sizes of the Earth,
the Moon and the Sun as well as the Distances
Between Them - D.N. Seppala-Holtzman
- St. Josephs College
- faculty.sjcny.edu/holtzman
2Step into my Time Machine
- Set the dial to 625 BC
- Destination Greece and the Eastern Mediterranean
Basin - Here we meet Thales (625 547 BC), generally
regarded as the person to first introduce the
notion of deductive reasoning and proof as
opposed to experiment and intuition.
3The Birth of Real Mathematics
- Prior to Thales, substantial use was made of
calculation in many cultures around the world. - This is not the same as mathematics.
- Thales gave us deductive systems of theorems and
rigorous proofs.
4The Maturation of Mathematics
- Over the next 8 centuries, the Greeks nurtured
and cultivated this powerful form of human
reasoning. - It was a gift to the world of extraordinary
value.
5Greek MathematicsSome Milestones
- Thales geometry and deductive reasoning
- Pythagoras (ca. 540 BC) number theory geometry
- Eudoxus (ca. 400 BC) method of exhaustion
- Plato (ca. 380 BC) mathematics and mental
training (The Academy) - Euclid (ca. 300 BC) The Elements
- Archimedes (ca. 225 BC) considered the greatest
mathematician of antiquity
6Archimedes
- Archimedes deserves a slide of his own.
- He contributed to and enormously advanced all
branches of mathematics of his day. - Amongst other things, he, along with Eudoxus (ca.
400 BC) laid out the foundations of the calculus
(some 1800 years before Newton) and used it to
obtain some extraordinary results.
7The Greeks and Astronomy
- The contributions of the individuals listed,
along with quite a number of others,
fundamentally changed the nature of pure
mathematics. - Impressive as it is, it is not the main topic of
todays presentation. - Instead, we turn to the extraordinary
contributions that the Greeks made to the field
of astronomy.
8Pondering the Seemingly Unknowable
- The Greeks, as did most ancient cultures,
pondered the mysteries of the sky. - What is the nature of the Earth on which we
stand? - What can be said of the Sun?
- What mysteries does our Moon hold?
9Mathematics Proves a Most Powerful Tool
- Quite astoundingly, the Greeks, despite having no
telescopes or other modern tools, were able to
determine, with amazing accuracy, the sizes of
and distances between the Earth, the Sun and the
Moon. - Mathematics was, essentially, their only tool.
10Similar Triangles I
- One of the main mathematical tools that was used
was the notion and properties of similar
triangles. - The definition is quite simple Two triangles are
said to be similar if all of the three angles of
one triangle are equal (the technical term is
congruent) to the corresponding angles of the
other triangle.
11Similar Triangles II
- Essentially, two triangles are similar if one is
a blown up or shrunk down copy of the other. - They have the same shape and proportions.
- Their only difference is size.
- Theorem Corresponding sides of similar triangles
are proportional.
12Similar Triangles III
E
B
C
A
F
D
13Similar Triangles IV
- In the previous slide, triangle ABC is similar to
triangle DEF. - Their sides are proportional.
- Thus, if side DE is k times the length of the
corresponding side AB, then DF will also be k
times the length of AC and EF will be k times the
length of BC. - All of these ks are the same.
14The Gnomon I
- A moment ago, it was claimed that the Greeks had
essentially no tools, other than mathematics to
aid them in their study of astronomy. - This is not entirely true.
- They had a device that served as a crude clock,
calendar, compass and sextant. - It was a stick.
15Gnomon II
- Place a straight stick, vertically in the ground.
Surround the stick with sand. - Observe and record in the sand the shadows that
it casts at different days and times. - At sunrise, the stick (called a gnomon) casts a
long shadow in the western direction. - As the day progresses, the shadow becomes shorter
and curves around towards the north (we assume,
throughout, that we are above the Tropic of
Cancer.)
16Gnomon III
- Later in the day, the shadow would begin to
lengthen again and point in the north-eastern
direction. - At sunset, the shadow would be long and pointing
in the eastern direction. - None of this is news. Why are we making a big
deal of this? - We are making a big deal because a great deal of
information can be deduced from these
observations, if you are clever.
17Gnomon IV
- The moment, on any given day, when the shadow is
the shortest is noon the gnomon is a clock. - The direction of the shadow at noon is geographic
north the gnomon is a compass. - Repeating this process daily gives the days of
the solstices. When the noontime shadow is the
longest, we get the winter solstice and when it
is the shortest, we get the summer solstice. The
days midway between the solstices are the
equinoxes. The gnomon is a calendar.
18Gnomon V
- Observing the angle of elevation of the sun with
respect to the gnomon on either of the equinoxes
gives the latitude. The gnomon is a sextant. - In other words, a great deal of information can
be deduced from this simple stick if you are
sufficiently clever. - The Greeks were clever.
19Observations and Assumptions I
- Not all that was known or discovered at this time
was deduced. - Some things were observed or assumed.
- To begin with, the Greeks realized that the Earth
was a sphere. - Their evidence included the fact that ships
disappeared over the horizon hull first and mast
last. - In addition, lunar eclipses showed that the
shadow that the Earth casts on the moon is round.
20Observations and Assumptions II
- The moon is clearly, observably, a sphere.
- Moonlight is light reflected from the sun, not
generated by the moon. This is obvious from the
phases of the moon. - The sun is very large and very far away.
- Indeed, it is so large, that its rays are
essentially parallel.
21Eratosthenes
- Eratosthenes (ca. 300 BC) was a brilliant
mathematician and Chief Librarian at the famous
Alexandria Library. - His famous sieve gave a method for finding the
prime numbers hidden amongst the integers. - He came up with a method to deduce the size of
the Earth.
22The Size of the Earth I
- Eratosthenes learned that there was a well in the
town of Syene, situated several hundred miles due
south of Alexandria, where, at noon on the summer
solstice, the sun illuminated the water at the
bottom of the well, i.e. the well was situated on
the Tropic of Cancer. - Eratosthenes knew that this never happened in
Alexandria because it lay above the Tropic of
Cancer. - He exploited this information to deduce the size
of the Earth.
23The Size of the Earth II
- Eratosthenes placed a gnomon vertically in the
ground in Alexandria and measured the angle
between the suns rays and the stick at noon on
the summer solstice. - He took as an assumption that the sun was so
large and the distance between Alexandria and
Syene so small in comparison, that the rays of
the sun were essentially parallel. - He measured an angle of 7.2 degrees.
24 The Size of the Earth III
- Some very simple trigonometry led Eratosthenes to
the conclusion that the angle between Syene and
Alexandria, measured at the center of the Earth,
must also be 7.2 degrees. - As 7.2 must be to 360 as the distance from
Alexandria to Syene is to the circumference of
the Earth, he concluded that this value was
24,500 miles. - As 7.2/360 1/50, Eratosthenes deduced that the
distance from Alexandria to Syene must be one
50th of the circumference of the Earth. - As the commonly accepted value today is 25,060,
he was right to within 2.3.
25The Size of the Earth IV
26The Size of the Earth V
- Knowing the circumference of the Earth gave the
radius of the Earth as an immediate corollary. - Since C 2 p R, we get a value for the radius,
R, of roughly 4,000 miles.
27The Size of the Moon I
- Now that he knew the size of the Earth,
Eratosthenes was able to deduce the size of the
moon. - Taking the rays of the sun to be roughly
parallel, the width of the shadow of the Earth
should be approximately equal to the Earths
diameter. - Timing the transit of the moon through this
shadow during a lunar eclipse gave the result he
sought.
28The Size of the Moon II
29The Size of the Moon III
- In the previous slide, it is seen that it takes
about 50 minutes for the moon to go from just
touching the shadow to being fully engulfed in
it. - It takes 200 minutes for the moon to begin to
emerge from the shadow. - Conclusion the diameter of the moon is ¼ of the
diameter of the Earth, or roughly 2,000 miles.
(The correct value is a tiny bit more 2,088
miles.)
30The Distance to the Moon I
- Now all Eratosthenes had to do to deduce the
distance from the Earth to the moon was to
exploit the properties of similar triangles. - If one extends an arm full length, one observes
that the moon has the apparent size as that of a
fingernail. - As an arms length is roughly 100 times the
height of a fingernail, we deduce that the
distance to the moon is roughly 100 times its
diameter or 200,000 miles.
31The Distance to the Moon II
32The Distance to the Sun I
- Using the results already established, a
contemporary of Eratosthenes, Aristarchus,
deduced the distance from the Earth to the sun as
follows. - He began with the observation that the light from
the moon was really reflected sunlight. Thus,
when the moon was in half phase, a right triangle
was formed with the centers of the sun, the moon
and the Earth as vertices.
33The Distance to the Sun II
34The Distance to the Sun III
- Aristarchus measured the base angle of this right
triangle and got a value of 87 degrees. - Simple trigonometry was now all that was required
to deduce the distance from the Earth to the sun.
- Alas, although his idea was brilliant, his
measurement was slightly flawed. The true value
is 89.85 degrees giving a distance of roughly
93,750,000 miles.
35The Size of the Sun I
- It is now very simple to deduce the size of the
sun from the well-observed fact that the apparent
sizes of the moon and the sun are nearly
identical. - During a solar eclipse, the moon fits almost
perfectly over the sun. - The only tool needed at this point is that of
similar triangles.
36The Size of the Sun II
37The Size of the Sun III
- From the similar triangles formed during a solar
eclipse (previous slide), we deduce that the
distance from the Earth to the sun is to the
diameter of the sun as the distance from the
Earth to the moon is to the diameter of the moon.
- This calculation gives a result of roughly
86,875,000 miles for the diameter of the sun.
38Conclusion
- Thus we see that, armed with an analytic mind-set
and the tools of deductive reasoning, the ancient
Greeks were able to conclude, with astounding
accuracy, the sizes of and distances between the
Earth, the sun and the moon. - One can only respond with awe.
39Further Reading