Talk:Eureka (word)
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It would be nice to identify and read some sources on the "Eureka!" moment of Archimedes. I seem to remember learning that there's more to the story than the popular legend. -- Beland 22:46, 2 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Buoyancy? I thought Archimedes' realization was that the volume of water displaced would be equal to the volume of the crown, the weight of the crown was easily measurable through other known methods, and with the two he could calculate density and thereby know if it was pure gold. --Mike Schiraldi 12:07, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)
What's the earliest source telling the story that Archimedes discovered Archimedes' principle in a bath house and shouted "Eureka"? Was it Vitruvius? Did this source already talk about the King's order (was there even a King in Archimedes' time?) to find a way to prove or disprove the King's suspicion that the crown he received did not contain all the gold he gave to the smith?
Perhalps we should repeat this story (as alledged, not as fact) a bit more in detail, both here and in the Archimedes article. -- Adhemar
- There's also a passage in Plutarch. The "king" in question was the tyrannos Hiero II. I feel it's deceptive to talk about an "order". That's not how Hiero worked and certainly not how Archimedes worked. Perhaps we might best see Archimedes as a man suffering from a severe Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder in that he forced himself to solve any mathematical problem he was confronted with. That Roman soldier might have been waiting for quite a while before he lost his patience...
-MWAK 18:59, 8 September 2005 (UTC)
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- The "bathtub" in the article is also an anachronism, if indeed the original tale in De architectura specifies the public baths of Syracuse. --Ziusudra 20:33, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Pronunciation
If anyone knows how to pronounce the word, could they add an IPA description? - Thanks.
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- In the classical Greek pronunciation provided my Mr. Foundalis (above), the rough breathing is ignored. The best source on these questions of pronunciation is probably still Edgar H. Sturtevant's Pronunciation of Greek and Latin, 1940, ISBN 0890050872. --Ziusudra 20:33, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] 2007-02-1 Automated pywikipediabot message
--CopyToWiktionaryBot 11:29, 1 February 2007 (UTC)