Archimedes computed the center of mass of several regions and bodies [Di-jksterhuis], and this fundamental physical notion may very well be due to him. He based his investigations of this concept on the notion of moment as it is used in his Law of the Lever. A hyperbolic version of this law was formulated in the nineteenth century leading to the notion of a hyperbolic center of mass of two point-masses [Andrade, Bonola]. In 1987 Galperin proposed an axiomatic definition of the center of mass of finite systems of point-masses in Euclidean, hyperbolic and elliptic n-dimensional spaces and proved its uniqueness. His proof is based on Minkowskian, or relativistic, models and evades the issue of moment. A surprising aspect of this work is that h...