The History of Mathematics: A Brief Course
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- APOLLONIUS^305
readable. On the other hand, Apollonius' work is no longer current research, and
from the historian's point of view this kind of tinkering with the text only makes
it harder to place the work in proper perspective.
In contrast to his older contemporary Archimedes, Apollonius remains a rather
obscure figure. His dates can be determined from the commentary written on the
Conies by Eutocius. Eutocius says that Apollonius lived in the time of the king
Ptolemy Euergetes and defends him against a charge by Archimedes' biographer
Heracleides that Apollonius plagiarized results of Archimedes. Eutocius' informa-
tion places Apollonius reliably in the second half of the third century BCE, perhaps
a generation or so younger than Archimedes.
Pappus says that as a young man Apollonius studied at Alexandria, where he
made the acquaintance of a certain Eudemus. It is probably this Eudemus to whom
Apollonius addresses himself in the preface to Book 1 of his treatise. From Apol-
lonius' own words we know that he had been in Alexandria and in Perga, which
had a library that rivaled the one in Alexandria. Eutocius reports an earlier writer,
Geminus by name, as saying that Apollonius was called "the great geometer" by his
contemporaries. He was highly esteemed as a mathematician by later mathemati-
cians, as the quotations from his works by Ptolemy and Pappus attest. In Book 12
of the Almagest, Ptolemy attributes to Apollonius a geometric construction for lo-
cating the point at which a planet begins to undergo retrograde motion. From these
later mathematicians we know the names of several works by Apollonius and have
some idea of their contents. However, only two of his works survive to this day, and
for them we are indebted to the Islamic mathematicians who continued to work
on the problems that Apollonius considered important. Our present knowledge of
Apollonius' Cutting Off of a Ratio, which contains geometric problems solvable by
the methods of application with defect and excess, is based on an Arabic manu-
script, no Greek manuscripts having survived. Of the eight books of Apollonius'
Conies, only seven have survived in Arabic and only four in Greek.
4.1. History of the Conies. The evolution of the Conies was reported by Pap-
pus five centuries after they were written in Book 7 of his Collection.
By filling out Euclid's four books on the conies and adding four oth-
ers Apollonius produced eight books on the conies. Aristaeus... and
all those before Apollonius, called the three conic curves sections of
acute-angled, right-angled, and obtuse-angled cones. But since all
three curves can be produced by cutting any of these three cones,
as Apollonius seems to have objected, [noting] that some others
before him had discovered that what was called a section of an
acute-angled cone could also be [a section of] a right- or obtuse-
angled cone... changing the nomenclature, he named the so-called
acute section an ellipse, the right section a parabola, and the ob-
tuse section a hyperbola.
As already mentioned, the first four books of Apollonius' Conies survived in
Greek, and seven of the eight books have survived in Arabic; the astronomer Ed-
mund Halley (1656-1743) published a Latin edition of them in 1710.
4.2. Contents of the Conies. In a preface addressed to the aforementioned
Eudemus, Apollonius lists the important results of his work: the description of
the sections, the properties of the figures relating to their diameters, axes, and