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entry
August 2005
Eureka! Exhibit at
the National Museum
Archimedes
and the crown of Hiero
Shortly thereafter in the public baths,
Archimedes lowered
himself into the water and noticed the displaced water flowing over the
rim of
the bath, whereupon he is said to have run butt naked out into the
streets of
Syracuse screaming "Eureka"—"I have found it!" Obviously
not the changing room, but the
principle of physics now named for him: "A body immersed in a fluid is
buoyed
up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid." Then, in a
scene right out of C.S.I. Syracuse, Archimedes got a tub of water, some
gold
and silver, splashed around a bit, and noticed that the crown and a
lump of
gold equal to the original amount did not displace the same amount of
water;
thus, the artisan had mixed in some silver, a lighter metal than gold.
He
had swindled the king. Vitruvius does not tell us what happened to ye
Royal Crown
Maker, but it probably wasn't community service.
Whoever wrote the brochure starts,
amazingly, with, "Few [sic!] remember that the Greeks
preceded
us in many fields of knowledge,
ranging from geometry to
medicine, from optics to astronomy; many modern theories derive from
their
studies, as do many applications considered for centuries real
miracles, used
for enjoyment, art, beauty, religion and work." I don't know that
"few remember". I thought everyone remembered. In any event, if you
don't, now is the time to do some serious refreshing. The exhibit
covers much
of the ground floor of the museum, purposefully spilling into an
outdoor space
meant to simulate the Greek agora, the place of assembly, the
market
place.
To augment the
display, the exhibit has some items from foreign museums, such as a
terracotta
oil-lamp in the form of a water-organ from the Louvre, and has dipped
into its
substantial collection of Greek items that are on permanent display in
Naples,
anyway, such as the Farnese Atlas (photo, above right) .
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