AbstractUsing the problem of deriving the volume of a sphere as its central focus, this paper tries to show the importance of different “heuristics” in Liu Hui and Zu Geng's ideas and theories of geometry. Rather than dismissing Liu's failure as due to inadequate time or effort, it argues that this failure was inherent in Liu's own heuristic, a powerful pattern of reasoning that enabled Liu to solve many geometrical problems, but also restrained him from finding the volume of a sphere. Zu Geng's heuristic, on the other hand, revealed its strength in problems concerning the sphere, although this does not imply that it could cover a wider range of geometrical problems than Liu's approach. Thus, directly beyond the problems concerned with the ...