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Chapters 41 |
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Introduction 2.1
The ancient state prison of Rome, situated between the temple of Concord and the curia at the foot of the Capitol. It was used simply as a place of detention, and not of penal servitude, though executions also took place here. The subterranean part was called Tullianum. The name is by Varro and Festus derived from Servius Tullius, who was the builder of this portion of the carcer : while Livy attributes the construction of the carcer to Ancus Martius. Sallust describes it in a well-known passage: in carcere locus quod Tullianumappellatur, ubi paullulum ascenderis ad laevam, circa duodecim pedes humi depressus. Eum muniunt undique parietes atque insuper camera lapideis fornicibus iuncta, sedincultu, tenebris, odore foeda atque terribilis eius facies est.
This lower chamber of the building is subterranean and was originally accessible only by a hole in the roof. It is nearly metres in diameter: in the walls only three courses of stone are visible, and it is thus less than feet high: but three more courses may still be hidden by the present floor, and this would give the feet of which Sallust speaks. The building was, according to one theory, in origin a cupola grave, like those of Mycenae: while others think that it served as a water reservoir, and derive the name Tullianum from tullus, a spring. A small spring does indeed still rise in the floor; and the absence of incrustation, used as an argument against the second hypothesis, has little weight, as the water is not calcareous.
It has generally been believed that the cupola was cut by the constructors of the upper chamber; Tenney Frank now supposes, without sufficient reason, that the lower chamber originally had a flat wooden roof, which later served as a scaffolding for the flat stone vault, which dates from after 100 B.C. But the holes to which he points in support of this theory may just as well have been cut for this scaffolding. There is little doubt that the chamber was originally circular.
Most authorities attribute to it a high antiquity: but Frank assigns the lower chamber to the third century B.C. owing to the use of peperino and the regularity of the blocks, uniformly 56 cm. high: while the date of the drain leading into the forum appears to be debateable.
The upper room is a vaulted trapezoid, the sides varying in length from 5 to 3.60 metres. This Frank assigns to about 100 B.C. on similar grounds; and the vault of the lower chamber, as we have seen, to a slightly later date.
A new facade of travertine was added by C. Vibius Rufinus and M. Cocceius Nerva, consules suffecti, perhaps in 22 A.D., but, it may be, a good deal later. It was still used as a prison in 368 A.D., so that the tradition that it was converted into an oratory in the fourth century is without foundation; and the fons S. Petri, ubi est carcer eius of Eins., cannot have been here.
The name Mamertinus is post-classical.
The building near the Regia, mis-called Carcer by Boni, is a series of cellars, and may belong to about 70-40 B.C. |
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1 2.5
As we are about to speak on the subject of the order of the times and
alternations of the world, we shall first dispose of the positions of
diverse calculators; who, by reckoning only by the course of the moon,
and leaving out of account the ascent and descent of the sun, with the
addition of certain problems, have constructed diverse periods,
self-contradictory, and such as are never found in the reckoning of a
true computation; since it is certain that no mode of computation is to
be approved, in which these two measures are not found together. For
even in the ancient exemplars, that is, in the books of the Hebrews and
Greeks, we find not only the course of the moon, but also that of the
sun, and, indeed, not simply its course in the general, but even
the separate and minutest moments of its hours all calculated, as we
shall show at the proper time, when the matter in hand demands it. Of
these Hippolytus made up a period of sixteen years with certain unknown
courses of the moon. Others have reckoned by a period of twenty-five
years, others by thirty, and some by eighty-four years, without,
however, teaching thereby an exact method of calculating Easter. But
our predecessors, men most learned in the books of the Hebrews and
Greeks,--I mean Isidore and Jerome and Clement,--although they have
noted similar beginnings for the months just as they differ also in
language, have, nevertheless, come harmoniously to one and the same
most exact reckoning of Easter, day and month and season meeting in
accord with the highest honour for the Lord's resurrection. But
Origen also, the most erudite of all, and the acutest in making
calculations,--a man, too, to whom the epithet chalkeutes is
given,--has published in a very elegant manner a little book on Easter.
And in this book, while declaring, with respect to the day of Easter,
that attention must be given not only to the course of the moon and the
transit of the equinox, but also to the passage (transcensum) of the
sun, which removes every foul ambush and offence of all darkness, and
brings on the advent of light and the power and inspiration of the
elements of the whole world, he speaks thus: In the (matter of the) day
of Easter, he remarks, I do not say that it is to be observed that the
Lord's day should be found, and the seven days of the moon which
are to elapse, but that the sun should pass that division, to wit,
between light and darkness, constituted in an equality by the
dispensation of the Lord at the beginning of the world; and that, from
one hour to two hours, from two to three, from three to four, from four
to five, from five to six hours, while the light is increasing in the
ascent of the sun, the darkness should decrease. ...and the
addition of the twentieth number being completed, twelve parts should
be supplied in one and the same day. But if I should have attempted to
add any little drop of mine after the exuberant streams of the
eloquence and science of some, what else should there be to believe but
that it should be ascribed by all to ostentation, and, to speak more
truly, to madness, did not the assistance of your promised prayers
animate us for a little? For we believe that nothing is impossible to
your power of prayer, and to your faith. Strengthened, therefore, by
this confidence, we shall set bashfulness aside, and shall enter this
most deep and unforeseen sea of the obscurest calculation, in which
swelling questions and problems surge around us on all sides.
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2 .8
There is, then, in the first year, the new moon of the first month,
which is the beginning of every cycle of nineteen years, on the six and
twentieth day of the month called by the Egyptians Phamenoth.
But, according to the months of the Macedonians, it is on the
two-and-twentieth day of Dystrus. And, as the Romans would say, it is
on the eleventh day before the Kalends of April. Now the sun is found
on the said six-and-twentieth day of Phamenoth, not only as having
mounted to the first segment, but as already passing the fourth day in
it. And this segment they are accustomed to call the first
dodecatemorion (twelfth part), and the equinox, and the beginning of
months, and the head of the cycle, and the starting-point of the
course of the planets. And the segment before this they call the last
of the months, and the twelfth segment, and the last dodecatemorion,
and the end of the circuit of the planets. And for this reason,
also, we maintain that those who place the first month in it, and who
determine the fourteenth day of the Paschal season by it, make no
trivial or common blunder.
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3 .7
Nor is this an opinion confined to ourselves alone. For it was also
known to the Jews of old and before Christ, and it was most carefully
observed by them. And this may be learned from what Philo, and
Josephus, and Musæus have written; and not only from these, but indeed
from others still more ancient, namely, the two Agathobuli, who
were surnamed the Masters, and the eminent Aristobulus, who was
one of the Seventy who translated the sacred and holy Scriptures of the
Hebrews for Ptolemy Philadelphus and his father, and dedicated his
exegetical books on the law of Moses to the same kings. These writers,
in solving some questions which are raised with respect to Exodus, say
that all alike ought to sacrifice the Passover after the vernal
equinox in the middle of the first month. And that is found to be when
the sun passes through the first segment of the solar, or, as some
among them have named it, the zodiacal circle.
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4 .4
But this Aristobulus also adds, that for the feast of the Passover it
was necessary not only that the sun should pass the equinoctial
segment, but the moon also. For as there are two equinoctial segments,
the vernal and the autumnal, and these diametrically opposite to each
other, and since the day of the Passover is fixed for the fourteenth
day of the month, in the evening, the moon will have the position
diametrically opposite the sun; as is to be seen in full moons. And the
sun will thus be in the segment of the vernal equinox, and the moon
necessarily will be at the autumnal equinox.
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5 .5
I am aware that very many other matters were discussed by them, some of
them with considerable probability, and others of them as matters of
the clearest demonstration, by which they endeavour to prove
that the festival of the Passover and unleavened bread ought by all
means to be kept after the equinox. But I shall pass on without
demanding such copious demonstrations (on subjects from which
the veil of the Mosaic law has been removed; for now it remains for us
with unveiled face to behold ever as in a glass Christ Himself and the
doctrines and sufferings of Christ. But that the first month among the
Hebrews is about the equinox, is clearly shown also by what is taught
in the book of Enoch.
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6 .9
And, therefore, in this concurrence of the sun and moon, the Paschal
festival is not to be celebrated, because as long as they are found in
this course the power of darkness is not overcome; and as long as
equality between light and darkness endures, and is not diminished by
the light, it is shown that the Paschal festival is not to be
celebrated. Accordingly, it is enjoined that that festival be kept
after the equinox, because the moon of the fourteenth, if before
the equinox or at the equinox, does not fill the whole night. But after
the equinox, the moon of the fourteenth, with one day being added
because of the passing of the equinox, although it does not extend to
the true light, that is, the rising of the sun and the beginning of
day, will nevertheless leave no darkness behind it. And, in accordance
with this, Moses is charged by the Lord to keep seven days of
unleavened bread for the celebration of the Passover, that in them no
power of darkness should be found to surpass the light. And although
the outset of four nights begins to be dark, that is, the 17th and 18th
and 19th and 20th, yet the moon of the 20th, which rises before that,
does not permit the darkness to extend on even to midnight.
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7 1.1
To us, however, with whom it is impossible for all these things to come
aptly at one and the same time, namely, the moon's fourteenth, and the
Lord's day, and the passing of the equinox, and whom the obligation of
the Lord's resurrection binds to keep the Paschal festival on the
Lord's day, it is granted that we may extend the beginning of our
celebration even to the moon's twentieth. For although the moon of the
20th does not fill the whole night, yet, rising as it does in the
second watch, it illumines the greater part of the night. Certainly if
the rising of the moon should be delayed on to the end of two watches,
that is to say, to midnight, the light would not then exceed the
darkness, but the darkness the light. But it is clear that in the
Paschal feast it is not possible that any part of the darkness should
surpass the light; for the festival of the Lord's resurrection is one
of light, and there is no fellowship between light and darkness. And if
the moon should rise in the third watch, it is clear that the 22d or
23d of the moon would then be reached, in which it is not possible that
there can be a true celebration of Easter. For those who determine that
the festival may be kept at this age of the moon, are not only unable
to make that good by the authority of Scripture, but turn also into the
crime of sacrilege and contumacy, and incur the peril of their souls;
inasmuch as they affirm that the true light may be celebrated along
with something of that power of darkness which dominates all.
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8 1.8
Accordingly, it is not the case, as certain calculators of Gaul allege,
that this assertion is opposed by that passage in Exodus, where
we read: "In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the first month,
at even, ye shall eat unleavened bread until the one-and-twentieth day
of the month at even. Seven days shall there be no leaven found in your
houses." From this they maintain that it is quite permissible to
celebrate the Passover on the twenty-first day of the moon;
understanding that if the twenty-second day were added, there would be
found eight days of unleavened bread. A thing which cannot be found
with any probability, indeed, in the Old Testament, as the Lord,
through Moses, gives this charge: "Seven days ye shall eat unleavened
bread." Unless perchance the fourteenth day is not reckoned by
them among the days of unleavened bread with the celebration of the
feast; which, however, is contrary to the Word of the Gospel which
says: "Moreover, on the first day of unleavened bread, the disciples
came to Jesus." And there is no doubt as to its being the
fourteenth day on which the disciples asked the Lord, in accordance
with the custom established for them of old, "Where wilt Thou that we
prepare for Thee to eat the Passover?" But they who are deceived with
this error maintain this addition, because they do not know that the
13th and 14th, the 14th and 15th, the 15th and 16th, the 16th and 17th,
the 17th and 18th, the 18th and 19th, the 19th and 20th, the 20th and
21st days of the moon are each found, as may be most surely proved,
within a single day. For every day in the reckoning of the moon does
not end in the evening as the same day in respect of number, as it is
at its beginning in the morning. For the day which in the morning, that
is up to the sixth hour and half, is numbered the 13th day of the
month, is found at even to be the 14th. Wherefore, also, the Passover
is enjoined to be extended on to the 21st day at even; which day,
without doubt, in the morning, that is, up to that term of hours which
we have mentioned, was reckoned the 20th. Calculate, then, from the end
of the 13th day of the moon, which marks the beginning of the
14th, on to the end of the 20th, at which the 21st day also begins, and
you will have only seven days of unleavened bread, in which, by the
guidance of the Lord, it has been determined before that the most true
feast of the Passover ought to be celebrated.
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9 .3
But what wonder is it that they should have erred in the matter of the
21st day of the moon who have added three days before the equinox, in
which they hold that the Passover may be celebrated? An assertion which
certainly must be considered altogether absurd, since, by the
best-known historiographers of the Jews, and by the Seventy Elders, it
has been clearly determined that the Paschal festival cannot be
celebrated at the equinox.
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10 1.7
But nothing was difficult to them with whom it was lawful to celebrate
the Passover on any day when the fourteenth of the moon happened after
the equinox. Following their example up to the present time all the
bishops of Asia--as themselves also receiving the rule from an
unimpeachable authority, to wit, the evangelist John, who leant on the
Lord's breast, and drank in instructions spiritual without doubt--were
in the way of celebrating the Paschal feast, without question, every
year, whenever the fourteenth day of the moon had come, and the lamb
was sacrificed by the Jews after the equinox was past; not acquiescing,
so far as regards this matter, with the authority of some, namely, the
successors of Peter and Paul, who have taught all the churches in which
they sowed the spiritual seeds of the Gospel, that the solemn festival
of the resurrection of the Lord can be celebrated only on the Lord's
day. Whence, also, a certain contention broke out between the
successors of these, namely, Victor, at that time bishop of the city of
Rome, and Polycrates, who then appeared to hold the primacy among the
bishops of Asia. And this contention was adjusted most rightfully by
Irenæus, at that time president of a part of Gaul, so that both
parties kept by their own order, and did not decline from the original
custom of antiquity. The one party, indeed, kept the Paschal day on the
fourteenth day of the first month, according to the Gospel, as they
thought, adding nothing of an extraneous kind, but keeping through all
things the rule of faith. And the other party, passing the day of the
Lord's Passion as one replete with sadness and grief, hold that it
should not be lawful to celebrate the Lord's mystery of the Passover at
any other time but on the Lord's day, on which the resurrection of the
Lord from death took place, and on which rose also for us the cause of
everlasting joy. For it is one thing to act in accordance with the
precept given by the apostle, yea, by the Lord Himself, and be sad with
the sad, and suffer with him that suffers by the cross, His own word
being: "My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death;" and it
is another thing to rejoice with the victor as he triumphs over an
ancient enemy, and exults with the highest triumph over a conquered
adversary, as He Himself also says: "Rejoice with Me; for I have found
the sheep which I had lost."
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11 1.4
Moreover, the allegation which they sometimes make against us, that if
we pass the moon's fourteenth we cannot celebrate the beginning of the
Paschal feast in light, neither moves nor disturbs us. For,
although they lay it down as a thing unlawful, that the beginning of
the Paschal festival should be extended so far as to the moon's
twentieth; yet they cannot deny that it ought to be extended to the
sixteenth and seventeenth, which coincide with the day on which the
Lord rose from the dead. But we decide that it is better that it should
be extended even on to the twentieth day, on account of the Lord's day,
than that we should anticipate the Lord's day on account of the
fourteenth day; for on the Lord's day was it that light was shown to us
in the beginning, and now also in the end, the comforts of all present
and the tokens of all future blessings. For the Lord ascribes no less
praise to the twentieth day than to the fourteenth. For in the book of
Leviticus the injunction is expressed thus: "In the first month,
on the fourteenth day of this month, at even, is the Lord's Passover.
And on the fifteenth day of this month is the feast of unleavened bread
unto the Lord. Seven days ye shall eat unleavened bread. The first day
shall be to you one most diligently attended and holy. Ye shall
do no servile work thereon. And the seventh day shall be to you more
diligently attended and holier; ye shall do no servile work
thereon." And hence we maintain that those have contracted no guilt
before the tribunal of Christ, who have held that the beginning
of the Paschal festival ought to be extended to this day. And this,
too, the most especially, as we are pressed by three difficulties,
namely, that we should keep the solemn festival of the Passover on the
Lord's day, and after the equinox, and yet not beyond the limit of the
moon's twentieth day.
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12 .5
But this again is held by other wise and most acute men to be an
impossibility, because within that narrow and most contracted limit of
a cycle of nineteen years, a thoroughly genuine Paschal time, that is
to say, one held on the Lord's day and yet after the equinox, cannot
occur. But, in order that we may set in a clearer light the difficulty
which causes their incredulity, we shall set down, along with the
courses of the moon, that cycle of years which we have mentioned; the
days being computed before in which the year rolls on in its
alternating courses, by Kalends and Ides and Nones, and by the sun's
ascent and descent.
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13 The moon's age set forth in the Julian Calendar 2.1
January, on the Kalends, one day, the moon's first (day); on the Nones,
the 5th day, the moon's 5th; on the Ides, the 13th day, the moon's
13th. On the day before the Kalends of February, the 31st day, the
moon's 1st; on the Kalends of February, the 32d day, the moon's 2d; on
the Nones, the 36th day, the moon's 6th; on the Ides, the 44th day, the
moon's 14th. On the day before the Kalends of March, the 59th day, the
moon's 29th; on the Kalends of March, the 60th day, the moon's 1st; on
the Nones, the 66th day, the moon's 7th; on the Ides, the 74th day, the
moon's 15th. On the day before the Kalends of April, the 90th day, the
moon's 2d; on the Kalends of April, the 91st day, the moon's 3d; on the
Nones, the 95th day, the moon's 7th; on the Ides, the 103d day, the
moon's 15th. On the day before the Kalends of May, the 120th day, the
moon's 3d; on the Kalends of May, the 121st day, the moon's 4th; on the
Nones, the 127th day, the moon's 10th; on the Ides, the 135th day, the
moon's 18th. On the day before the Kalends of June, the 151st day, the
moon's 3d; on the Kalends of June, the 152d day, the moon's 5th; on the
Nones, the 153d day, the moon's 9th; on the Ides, the 164th day, the
moon's 17th. On the day before the Kalends of July, the 181st day, the
moon's 5th; on the Kalends of July, the 182d day, the moon's 6th; on
the Nones, the 188th day, the moon's 12th; on the Ides, the 196th day,
the moon's 20th. On the day before the Kalends of August, the 212th
day, the moon's 5th; on the Kalends of August, the 213th day, the
moon's 7th; on the Nones, the 217th day, the moon's 12th; on the Ides,
the 225th day, the moon's 19th. On the day before the Kalends of
September, the 243d day, the moon's 7th; on the Kalends of September,
the 244th day, the moon's 8th; on the Nones, the 248th day, the moon's
12th; on the Ides, the 256th day, the moon's 20th. On the day before
the Kalends of October, the 273d day, the moon's 8th; on the Kalends of
October, the 247th day, the moon's 9th; on the Nones, the 280th day,
the moon's 15th; on the Ides, the 288th day, the moon's 23d. On the day
before the Kalends of November, the 304th day, the moon's 9th; on the
Kalends of November, the 305th day, the moon's 10th; on the Nones, the
309th day, the moon's 14th; on the Ides, the 317th day, the moon's 22d.
On the day before the Kalends of December, the 334th day, the moon's
10th; on the Kalends of December, the 335th day, the moon's 11th; on
the Nones, the 339th day, the moon's 15th; on the Ides, the 347th day,
the moon's 23d. On the day before the Kalends of January, the 365th
day, the moon's 11th; on the Kalends of January, the 366th day, the
moon's 12th.
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14 The Paschal or Easter Table of Anatolius 66W
Now, then, after the reckoning of the days and the exposition of the
course of the moon, whereon the whole revolves on to its end, the cycle
of the years may be set forth from the commencement. This makes
the Passover (Easter season) circulate between the 6th day before the
Kalends of April and the 9th before the Kalends of May, according to
the following table:
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15 1.1
This cycle of nineteen years is not approved of by certain African
investigators who have drawn up larger cycles, because it seems to be
somewhat opposed to their surmises and opinions. For these make up the
best proved accounts according to their calculation, and determine a
certain beginning or certain end for the Easter season, so as that the
Paschal festival shall not be celebrated before the eleventh day before
the Kalends of April, i.e., 24th March, nor after the moon's
twenty-first, and the eleventh day before the Kalends of May, i.e.,
21st April. But we hold that these are limits not only not to be
followed, but to be detested and overturned. For even in the ancient
law it is laid down that this is to be seen to, viz., that the Passover
be not celebrated before the transit of the vernal equinox, at which
the last of the autumnal term is overtaken, on the fourteenth
day of the first month, which is one calculated not by the beginnings
of the day, but by those of the moon. And as this has been
sanctioned by the charge of the Lord, and is in all things accordant
with the Catholic faith, it cannot be doubtful to any wise man that to
anticipate it must be a thing unlawful and perilous. And, accordingly,
this only is it sufficient for all the saints and Catholics to observe,
namely, that giving no heed to the diverse opinions of very many, they
should keep the solemn festival of the Lord's resurrection within the
limits which we have set forth.
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16 2.3
Furthermore, as to the proposal subjoined to your epistle, that I
should attempt to introduce into this little book some notice of the
ascent and descent of the sun, which is made out in the distribution of
days and nights. The matter proceeds thus: In fifteen days and half an
hour, the sun ascending by so many minutes, that is, by four in one
day, from the eighth day before the Kalends of January, i.e., 25th
December, to the eighth before the Kalends of April, i.e., 25th March,
an hour is taken up; at which date there are twelve hours and a
twelfth. On this day, towards evening, if it happen also to be the
moon's fourteenth, the lamb was sacrificed among the Jews. But if the
number went beyond that, so that it was the moon's fifteenth or
sixteenth on the evening of the same day, on the fourteenth day of the
second moon, in the same month, the Passover was celebrated; and the
people ate unleavened bread for seven days, up to the twenty-first day
at evening. Hence, if it happens in like manner to us, that the seventh
day before the Kalends of April, 26th March, proves to be both the
Lord's day and the moon's fourteenth, Easter is to be celebrated on the
fourteenth. But if it proves to be the moon's fifteenth or sixteenth,
or any day up to the twentieth, then our regard for the Lord's
resurrection, which took place on the Lord's day, will lead us to
celebrate it on the same principle; yet this should be done so as that
the beginning of Easter may not pass beyond the close of their
festival, that is to say, the moon's twentieth. And therefore we have
said that those parties have committed no trivial offence who have
ventured either on anticipating or on going beyond this number, which
is given us in the divine Scriptures themselves. And from the eighth
day before the Kalends of April, 25th March, to the eighth before the
Kalends of July, 24th June, in fifteen days an hour is taken up: the
sun ascending every day by two minutes and a half, and the sixth part
of a minute. And from the eighth day before the Kalends of July, 24th
June, to the eighth before the Kalends of October, 24th September, in
like manner, in fifteen days and four hours, an hour is taken up: the
sun descending every day by the same number of minutes. And the space
remaining on to the eighth day before the Kalends of January, 25th
December, is determined in a similar number of hours and minutes. So
that thus on the eighth day before the Kalends of January, for the hour
there is the hour and half. For up to that day and night are
distributed. And the twelve hours which were established at the vernal
equinox in the beginning by the Lord's dispensation, being distributed
over the night on the eighth before the Kalends of July, the sun
ascending through those eighteen several degrees which we have noted,
shall be found conjoined with the longer space in the twelfth. And,
again, the twelve hours which should be fulfilled at the autumnal
equinox in the sun's descent, should be found disjoined on the sixth
before the Kalends of January as six hours divided into twelve, the
night holding eighteen divided into twelve. And on the eighth before
the Kalends of July, in like manner, it held six divided into twelve.
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17 4.9
Be not ignorant of this, however, that those four determining periods,
which we have mentioned, although they are approximated to the
Kalends of the following months, yet hold each the middle of a season,
viz., of spring and summer, and autumn and winter. And the beginnings
of the seasons are not to be fixed at that point at which the Kalends
of the month begin. But each season is to be begun in such way that the
equinox divides the season of spring from its first day; and the season
of summer is divided by the eighth day before the Kalends of July, and
that of autumn by the eighth before the Kalends of October, and that of
winter by the eighth before the Kalends of January in like manner.
Fragments of the Books on Arithmetic.
What is mathematics?
Aristotle thinks that all philosophy consisted of theory and practice,
and divides the practical into ethical and political, and the
theoretic again into the theological, the physical, and the
mathematical. And thus very clearly and skilfully he shows that
mathematics is (a branch of) philosophy.
The Chaldæans were the originators of astronomy, and the Egyptians of
geometry and arithmetic....
And whence did mathematics derive its name?
Those of the Peripatetic school affirmed that in rhetoric and poetry,
and in the popular music, any one may be an adept though he has gone
through no process of study; but that in those pursuits properly called
studies, none can have any real knowledge unless he has first
become a student of them. Hence they supposed that the theory of these
things was called Mathematics, from mathema, study, science. And the
followers of Pythagoras are said to have given this more distinctive
name of mathematics to geometry, and arithmetic alone. For of old these
had each its own separate name; and they had up till then no name
common to both. And he (Archytas) gave them this name, because he found
science in them, and that in a manner suitable to man's study.
For they (the Pythagoreans) perceived that these studies dealt
with things eternal and immutable and perfect, in which things
alone they considered that science consisted. But the more recent
philosophers have given a more extensive application to this name, so
that, in their opinion, the mathematician deals not only with
substances incorporeal, and falling simply within the province
of the understanding, but also with that which touches upon
corporeal and sensible matter. For he ought to be cognisant of
the course of the stars, and their velocity, and their magnitudes, and
forms, and distances. And, besides, he ought to investigate their
dispositions to vision, examining into the causes, why they are not
seen as of the same form and of the same size from every distance,
retaining, indeed, as we know them to do, their dispositions relative
to each other, but producing, at the same time, deceptive
appearances, both in respect of order and position. And these are so,
either as determined by the state of the heavens and the air, or as
seen in reflecting and all polished surfaces and in transparent bodies,
and in all similar kinds. In addition to this, they thought that the
man ought to be versed in mechanics and geometry and dialectics. And
still further, that he should engage himself with the causes of the
harmonious combination of sounds, and with the composition of music;
which things are bodies, or at least are to be ultimately
referred to sensible matter.
What is mathematics?
Mathematics is a theoretic science of things apprehensible by
perception and sensation for communication to others. 1206 And before
this a certain person indulging in a joke, while hitting his mark, said
that mathematics is that science to which Homer's description of
Discord may be applied.--
"Small at her birth, but rising every hour,
While scarce the skies her horrid (mighty) head can bound,
She stalks on earth and shakes the world around."
For it begins with a point and a line, and forthwith it takes
heaven itself and all things within its compass.
How many divisions are there of mathematics?
Of the more notable and the earliest mathematics there are two
principal divisions, viz., arithmetic and geometry. And of the
mathematics which deals with things sensible there are six divisions,
viz., computation (practical arithmetic), geodesy, optics, theoretical
music, mechanics, and astronomy. But that neither the so-called tactics
nor architecture, 1209 nor the popular music, nor physics, nor the
art which is called equivocally the mechanical, constitutes, as some
think, a branch of mathematics, we shall prove, as the discourse
proceeds, clearly and systematically.
As to the circle having eight solids and six superficies and four
angles....What branches of arithmetic have closest affinity with each
other? Computation and theoretical music have a closer affinity than
others with arithmetic; for this department, being one also of quantity
and ratio, approaches it in number and proportion. Optics and
geodesy, again, are more in affinity with geometry. And mechanics and
astrology are in general affinity with both.
As to mathematics having its principles in hypothesis and about
hypothesis. Now, the term hypothesis is used in three ways, or indeed
in many ways. For according to one usage of the term we have the
dramatic revolution; and in this sense there are said to be
hypotheses in the dramas of Euripides. According to a second meaning,
we have the investigation of matters in the special in rhetoric; and in
this sense the Sophists say that a hypothesis must be proposed. And,
according to a third signification, the beginning of a proof is called
a hypothesis, as being the begging of certain matters with a view to
the establishment of another in question. Thus it is said that
Democritus used a hypothesis, namely, that of atoms and a
vacuum; and Asclepiades that of atoms and pores. Now,
when applied to mathematics, the term hypothesis is to be taken in the
third sense.
That Pythagoras was not the only one who duly honoured arithmetic, but
that his best known disciples did so too, being wont to say that "all
things fit number."
That arithmetic has as its immediate end chiefly the theory of science,
than which there is no end either greater or nobler. And its
second end is to bring together in one all that is found in determinate
substance.
Who among the mathematicians has made any discovery?
Eudemus relates in his Astrologies that OEnopides found
out the circle of the zodiac and the cycle of the great year.
And Thales discovered the eclipse of the sun and its period in
the tropics in its constant inequality. And Anaximander
discovered that the earth is poised in space, and moves round
the axis of the universe. And Anaximenes discovered that the
moon has her light from the sun, and found out also the way in which
she suffers eclipse. And the rest of the mathematicians have also made
additions to these discoveries. We may instance the facts--that the
fixed stars move round the axis passing through the poles, while the
planets remove from each other round the perpendicular axis of
the zodiac; and that the axis of the fixed stars and the planets is the
side of a pentedecagon with four-and-twenty parts.
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