Heliodorus of Larissa (fl. 3rd century?) was a Greek mathematician, and the author of a short treatise on optics which is still extant.

Biography

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Nothing is known about the life of Heliodorus.[1] He was a native of Larissa,[2] and he must have lived after the time of Claudius Ptolemy, whom he quotes. His short treatise on optics is little more than a commentary on Euclid.[3] It was edited by one Damianus, who was either his son or his pupil.[2] The first printed edition, in Greek and Latin, was published in Paris in 1657 with illustrative notes by Erasmus Bartholinus.[1]

Works

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  • Capita opticorum (in Latin). Pistoia: Atto Bracali. 1758.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b John Aikin, William Enfield, et al., (1804), General biography: or, Lives, critical and historical, of the most ..., Volume 5, page 102
  2. ^ a b The prosopography of the later Roman Empire: A.D. 260-395: Volume 1, (1987), page 531
  3. ^ David Eugene Smith, (1958), History of mathematics, page 340