How to Draw a Straight Line - A Lecture on Linkages

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63

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2010

Le téléchargement nécessite un accès à la bibliothèque YouScribe Tout savoir sur nos offres

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08 décembre 2010

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The Project Gutenberg EBook of How to Draw a Straight Line, by A.B. Kempe
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
Title: How to Draw a Straight Line A Lecture on Linkages
Author: A.B. Kempe
Release Date: April 24, 2008 [EBook #25155]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW TO DRAW A STRAIGHT LINE ***
HOW
TO
DRAW
LECTURE
A
A
ON
STRAIGHT
LINKAGES
LINE;
NATURE SERIES.
HOWOTRDAWA
A
TSRAIGHT
LECTURE ON LINKAGES.
BY
A. B. KEMPE, B.A.,
ILN
OF THE INNER TEMPLE, ESQ.; MEMBER OF THE COUNCIL OF THE LONDON MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY; AND LATE SCHOLAR OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE.
W I T H N U M E R O U S I L L U S T R A T I O N S .
: 1877.
E
;
Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, David Wilson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images from the Cornell University Library: Historical Mathematics Monographs collection.)
Transcriber’s notes The original book was published by MacMillan and Co., and printed by R. Clay, Sons, and Taylor, Printers, Bread Street Hill, Queen Victoria Street. Inconsistent spelling (quadriplane/quadruplane) has been retained. Some illustrations have been removed slightly from their original locations to avoid infelicitous page breaks. Minor typographical corrections are documented in the LATEX source.
NOTICE.
ThisLecture was one of the series delivered to science teachers last summer in connection with the Loan Collection of Scientific Apparatus. I have taken the opportunity afforded by its publication to slightly enlarge it and to add several notes. For the illustrations I am indebted to my brother, Mr.H. R. Kempewithout whose able and indefatigable co-, operation in drawing them and in constructing the models furnished by me to the Loan Collection I could hardly have undertaken the delivery of the Lecture, and still less its pub-lication.
7,Crown Office Row, Temple, January16th, 1877.
HOWOTRDAWATSARIGHTL
A L E C T U R E O N L I N K A G E S .
INE
:
Thegreat geometrician Euclid, before demonstrating to us the various propositions contained in hisElements of Geom-etry, requires that we should be able to effect certain pro-cesses. ThesePostulates, as the requirements are termed, may roughly be said to demand that we should be able to describe straight lines and circles. And so great is the veneration that is paid to this master-geometrician, that there are many who would refuse the designation of “geometrical” to a demon-stration which requires any other construction than can be effected by straight lines and circles. Hence many problems— such as, for example, the trisection of an angle—which can readily be effected by employing other simple means, are said to have no geometrical solution, since they cannot be solved by straight lines and circles only. It becomes then interesting to inquire how we can effect these preliminary requirements, how we can describe these circles and these straight lines, with as much accuracy as the physical circumstances of the problems will admit of.
2HOW TO DRAW A STRAIGHT LINE:
As regards the circle we encounter no difficulty. Tak-ing Euclid’s definition, and assuming, as of course we must, that our surface on which we wish to describe the circle is a plane, (1)1we see that we have only to make our tracing-point preserve a distance from the given centre of the circle constant and equal to the required radius. This can readily be effected by taking a flat piece of any form, such as the piece of cardboard I have here, and passing a pivot which is fixed to the given surface at the given centre through a hole in the piece, and a tracer or pencil through another hole in it whose distance from the first is equal to the given radius; we shall then, by moving the pencil, be able, even with this rude appa-ratus, to describe a circle with considerable accuracy and ease; and when we come to employ very small holes and pivots, or even large ones, turned with all that marvellous truth which the lathe affords, we shall get a result unequalled perhaps among mechanical apparatus for the smoothness and accu-racy of its movement. The apparatus I have just described is of course nothing but a simple form of a pair of compasses, and it is usual to say that the third Postulate postulates the compasses. But the straight line, how are we going to describe that? Euclid defines it as “lying evenly between its extreme points.” This does not help us much. Our text-books say that the first and second Postulates postulate a ruler (2). But surely that is begging the question. If we are to draw a straight line with a ruler, the ruler must itself have a straight edge; and how are we going to make the edge straight? We come back to our starting-point. Now I wish you clearly to understand the difference
1These figures refer to Notes at the end of the lecture.
A LECTURE ON LINKAGES
3
between the method I just now employed for describing a circle, and the ruler method of describing a straight line. If I applied the ruler method to the description of a circle, I should take a circular lamina, such as a penny, and trace my circle by passing the pencil round the edge, and I should have the same difficulty that I had with the straight-edge, for I should first have to make the lamina itself circular. But the other method I employed involves no begging the question. I do not first assume that I have a circle and then use it to trace one, but simply require that the distance between two points shall be invariable. I am of course aware that we do employ circles in our simple compass, the pivot and the hole in the moving piece which it fits are such; but they are used not because they are the curves we want to describe (they are not so, but are of a different size), as is the case with the straight-edge, but because, through the impossibility of con-structing pivots or holes of no finite dimensions, we are forced to adopt the best substitute we can for making one point in the moving piece remain at the same spot. If we employ a very small pivot and hole, though they be not truly circular, the error in the description of a circle of moderate dimensions will be practically infinitesimal, not perhaps varying beyond the width of the thinnest line which the tracer can be made to describe; and even when we employ large pivots and holes we shall get results as accurate, because those pivots and holes may be made by the employment of very small ones in the machine which makes them.
It appears then, that although we have an easy and accu-rate method of describing a circle, we have at first sight no corresponding means of describing a straight line; and there would seem to be a substantial difficulty in producing what
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