Helpful Handicap
Quirk writes "National Geographic has an interesting article connecting the Olympics of ancient Greece with the modern principles of physics. The ancient Greeks used hand weights called halteres held in each hand when attempting the Olympic contest of the standing long-jump. The idea of hand held weights in the long-jump might at first seem counterintuitive but the idea is scientifically sound and was supposedly first fairly accurately explained by no less a person than Aristotle, the father of syllogistic logic."
He's the guy who said that objects move in straight lines on Earth. He'd therefore obviously never seen a long jump, so I wouldn't place too much faith in his reasoning.
Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
What kind of (dis)advantage would this give in the aquatic events?
--- If we knew half the things we shouldn't we'd stop wishing we knew it all
How is this flamebait?
When I studied the archeology of the period, we were told that the distances achieved by Greek (standing) long jumpers could not be achieved by (presumably better nourished, better trained) athletes today.
:^).
Everybody assumed it was because of the halteres, but nobody could manage to figure out the technique by trial and error (at least when I was in school, shortly before the extinction of the dinosaurs).
If this works, we should definitely re-introduce it to the games. Obviously it requires athletic skill, but it doesn't require expensive accoutrements like luges, luge tracks, skis, carbon-fiber poles, etc. etc. etc... just a couple of rocks. Let's have a contest that doesn't favor the rich nations quite so much. That way we can be prouder of winning it
I guess I can see the argument that more weight means you have to do more work to jump far, but my intuition was confused by this article. I'd have thought that weights in the hands would obviously give a benefit.
Basically you get to throw the objects out in front of you and then have them pull you along, without really sacrificing anything.
Don't most people jump by swinging their arms forward first (even if their hands are empty)? I'd think the same principle was at work.
Anyway, it seems weird that this wasn't obvious, although I believe the math may be hard to model.
Aristotle also believed men were smarter than women because they had more teeth. He never bothered to check if men actually have more teeth than women, though. Use Aristotle in your appeals to authority sparingly.
Wasn't that the guy that hung out with Bill and Ted for sometime?
Oh, wait. That was SoCrates. heh.
There is more in heaven and earth than is dreamt of in your philosophy. -- Shakespeare's Hamlet
The actual line is, "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy." Hamlet says it in Act I, Scene 5, IIRC.
For the visually oriented, there's pictures of halteres in the commentary in Nature along with another brief article. The technical description and data to support this theory about how the halteres were beneficial is here, but I think this is only accessible to Nature subscribers.
It also occurs to me that if one was drowning, yelling "Help! I'm drowning and I lost my bikini top" would probably be m