Best 19 quotes of Archimedes on MyQuotes

Archimedes

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    Archimedes

    Any solid lighter than a fluid will, if placed in the fluid, be so far immersed that the weight of the solid will be equal to the weight of the fluid displaced. On floating bodies I, prop 5.

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    Archimedes

    Equal weights at equal distances are in equilibrium and equal weights at unequal distances are not in equilibrium but incline towards the weight which is at the greater distance.

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    Archimedes

    Eureka! Eureka! Supposed to have been his cry, jumping naked from his bath and running in the streets, excited by a discovery about water displacement to solve a problem about the purity of a gold crown.

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    Archimedes

    Eureka! [I have found it!] On discovery of a method to test the purity of gold.

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    Archimedes

    Having been the discoverer of many splendid things, he is said to have asked his friends and relations that, after his death, they should place on his tomb a cylinder enclosing a sphere, writing on it the proportion of the containing solid to that which is contained.

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    Archimedes

    How many theorems in geometry which have seemed at first impracticable are in time successfully worked out!

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    Archimedes

    I am persuaded that this method [for calculating the volume of a sphere] will be of no little service to mathematics. For I foresee that once it is understood and established, it will be used to discover other theorems which have not yet occurred to me, by other mathematicians, now living or yet unborn.

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    Archimedes

    It follows at once from the last proposition that the centre of gravity of any triangle is at the intersection of the lines drawn from any two angles to the middle points of the opposite sides respectively.

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    Archimedes

    Man has always learned from the past. After all, you can't learn history in reverse!

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    Archimedes

    Many people believe that the grains of sand are infinite in multitude ... Others think that although their number is not without limit, no number can ever be named which will be greater than the number of grains of sand. But I shall try to prove to you that among the numbers which I have named there are those which exceed the number of grains in a heap of sand the size not only of the earth, but even of the universe

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    Archimedes

    Mathematics reveals its secrets only to those who approach it with pure love, for its own beauty.

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    Archimedes

    Rise above oneself and grasp the world.

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    Archimedes

    Spoken of the young Archimedes: . . . [he] was as much enchanted by the rudiments of algebra as he would have been if I had given him an engine worked by steam, with a methylated spirit lamp to heat the boiler; more enchanted, perhaps for the engine would have got broken, and, remaining always itself, would in any case have lost its charm, while the rudiments of algebra continued to grow and blossom in his mind with an unfailing luxuriance. Every day he made the discovery of something which seemed to him exquisitely beautiful; the new toy was inexhaustible in its potentialities.

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    Archimedes

    The centre of gravity of any parallelogram lies on the straight line joining the middle points of opposite sides.

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    Archimedes

    The diameter of the earth is greater than the diameter of the moon and the diameter of the sun is greater than the diameter of the earth.

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    Archimedes

    The perimeter of the earth is about 3,000,000 stadia and not greater.

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    Archimedes

    There are things which seem incredible to most men who have not studied Mathematics.

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    Archimedes

    Those who claim to discover everything but produce no proofs of the same may be confuted as having actually pretended to discover the impossible.

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    Archimedes

    Two magnitudes whether commensurable or incommensurable, balance at distances reciprocally proportional to the magnitudes.