Page:The Construction of the Wonderful Canon of Logarithms.djvu/44

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20 CONSTRUCTION OF THE CANON.

28.Whence also it follows that the logarithm of any given sine ts greater than the difference between radius and the given sine, and less than the difference between radius and the quantity which exceeds it in the ratio of radius to the given sine. And these differences are therefore called the limits of the logarithm.

Thus, the preceding figure being repeated, and S T being produced beyond T to 0, so that 0 S is to T S as T S to d S. I say that b c, the logarithm of the sine d S, is greater than T d and less than 0 T. For in the same time that g is borne from 0 to T, g is borne from T to d, because (by 24) 0 T is such a part of 0 S as T d is of T S, and in the same time (by the definition of a logarithm) is a borne from b to c; so that o T, T d, and b c are distances traversed in equal times. But since g when moving between T and 0 is swifter than at T, and between T and d slower, but at T is equally swift with a (by 26); it follows that 0 T the distance traversed by g moving swiftly is greater, and T d the distance traversed by g moving slowly is less, than b c the distance traversed by the point a with its medium motion, in just the same moments of time; the latter is, consequently, a certain mean between the two former.

Therefore 0 T is called the greater limit, and
T d