Conny Waters – AncientPages.com – When someone says “Eureka,” it’s because they have suddenly found or realized something or solved a problem. Scientists often shout Eureka when they have made a triumphant discovery.
Borrowed from ancient Greek: εὕρηκα the word Eureka means “I have found it!”
When using a famous word like “Eureka,” it can be interesting to know its origin. Who said Eureka first and why?
Archimedes by Domenico Fetti 1620 – Credit: Public Domain
The first documented “Eureka!” moment can be traced to the ancient Greek scientist Archimedes.
Archimedes was a great scholar from Syracuse, the ancient capital of Sicily, originally a Greek colony founded by Corinth in 734 BC.
“Not much is known about Archimedes, and information about him comes only from the introduction of his works and from numerous anecdotes often quoted by ancient historians.
He was the son of Fidias, an unknown astronomer about whom nothing is known. Even the year of Archimedes’ birth (probably about 287 BC) has never been established with absolute certainty.” 1
“Archimedes studied at the Alexandrian Museum from about 260 BC, before returning to his native Syracuse in Sicily to continue his work. To glance at a few of his achievements: his masterly mathematical proofs at times anticipated integral calculus; he invented by himself and developed to incredible elaboration the science of hydrostatics (the pressure and equilibrium of liquids at rest); he was the first man to work out accurately the value of pi; and he was the first to come up with the formula for measuring the volume of a sphere. Arguably, no other mathematician has ever made so many advances.” 2
On one occasion, Archimedes was confronted with a scientific problem he could not solve quickly.
King Hieron II of Syracuse in Sicily gave a goldsmith a gold bar to make into a crown. The goldsmith delivered the pure gold crown to the King, but
was suspicious, thinking the goldsmith had cheated him.
To find out if the crown he had received was made of solid gold or whether he had been palmed off with one containing silver, the King asked Archimedes to solve the problem.
Determining whether the crown was made of only gold was tricky without melting it down and, by doing so, destroying it.
Archimedes knew that gold and silver have different densities, meaning that a lump of gold will weigh about twice as much as a lump of silver the same size. The trouble was that no one knew how to work out the size of an irregularly shaped object like a crown. While pondering this conundrum, Archimedes went to the public baths to relax.
The answer came to him while he was taking a bath. Archimedes noticed that the water level rose when he got in, and it struck him that he could determine the gold density of the crown by weighing it in water.
Archimedes’ principle states that any object, totally or partially immersed in a fluid, is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.
16th-century illustration of Archimedes in the bath, with the crown of King Hieron II at bottom right. Credit: Public Domain
To make a long story short, Archimedes discovered the hydrostatic law of buoyancy while bathing and playing with a rubber duck and a plastic boat. Eager to tell King Hieron II of Syracuse, the goldsmith had deceived him and, excited by his discovery, ran out into the streets of Syracuse, screaming, “Eureka!” which means “I found it.”
He ran out into the streets of Syracuse, screaming, “Eureka!” which means “I found.” Archimedes probably did not even notice that he was naked and on his way to the ruler.
“Thus, the great man became known to the city’s inhabitants not only as a brilliant scholar but also as an exhibitionist.” 1
It is difficult to say whether the story is true because there is no “proper evidence for it.
There is a series of such apocryphal tales in the history of science.
There is no evidence for Archimedes leaping from his bath, no evidence that Galileo dropped cannon balls from the leaning tower of Pisa (he knew of much better experiments than this already), no evidence that Newton had a realisation about gravity while sitting under an apple tree, or that Watt invented the steam engine while watching a kettle boil (the steam engine had long been invented, and Watt’s improvements to it had nothing to do with steam expanding).” 3
Written by Conny Waters – AncientPages.com Staff Writer
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Expand for references
- Sutherland – Archimedes From Syracuse – Master Of Science Whose Legacy Still Remains Powerful, AncientPages.com
- Peter Jones – Eureka!: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Ancient Greeks But Were Afraid to Ask
- Andrew Gregory – Eureka!: The Birth of Science (Icon Science)