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| Fotografii | Monede | Timbre | Schite | Cautare |
Theon's most important work is Expositio rerum mathematicarum ad legendum Platonem utilium. This work is a handbook for philosophy students to show how prime numbers , geometrical numbers such as squares, progressions, music and astronomy are interrelated. Its rather curious title means that it was intended as an introduction to a study of the works of Plato , but this is rather fanciful. As Huxley writes in :
The most important feature of the work is the wide range of citations of earlier sources. Its worst feature is its lack of originality. Heath writes :
In the introduction Theon gives his reason for writing the work:
The work begins with a collection of theorems which Theon says will be useful for the study of arithmetic, music, geometry, and astronomy in Plato . However his coverage of geometry is none too good and later in the book he makes an excuse for this saying that anyone who reads his book, or the works of Plato , will have already studied elementary geometry. In the section on numbers Theon adopts a Pythagorean approach, writing about odd numbers, even numbers, prime numbers, composite numbers , square numbers , oblong numbers , triangular numbers , polygonal numbers , circular numbers, spherical numbers, solid numbers with three factors, pyramidal numbers , perfect numbers , deficient numbers and abundant numbers . The best section of Expositio rerum mathematicarum is the astronomy section which teaches that the Earth is spherical, that mountains are negligible in height compared with the Earth etc. It includes knowledge of conjunctions , eclipses, occultations and transits . However, Neugebauer writes in :
Theon also wrote commentaries on the main authorities of mathematics and astronomy. In particular he wrote an important work on Ptolemy and another on Plato 's Republic which he refers to himself in work which survives. Whether his work on the ancestry of Plato is a separate work or a section of one of his commentaries on Plato 's work, it is impossible to say.
Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |