Sunday, March 8, 2020
Euclid Essays (765 words) - Foundations Of Geometry, Euclid
Euclid Essays (765 words) - Foundations Of Geometry, Euclid    Euclid      Euclid is one of the most influential and best read mathematician of all time. His prize work,  Elements, was the textbook of elementary geometry and logic up to the early twentieth century. For  his work in the field, he is known as the father of geometry and is considered one of the great  Greek mathematicians.  Very little is known about the life of Euclid. Both the dates and places of his birth and death are  unknown. It is believed that he was educated at Plato's academy in Athens and stayed there until he  was invited by Ptolemy I to teach at his newly founded university in Alexandria. There, Euclid  founded the school of mathematics and remained there for the rest of his life. As a teacher, he was  probably one of the mentors to Archimedes.  Personally, all accounts of Euclid describe him as a kind, fair, patient man who quickly helped and  praised the works of others. However, this did not stop him from engaging in sarcasm. One story  relates that one of his students complained that he had no use for any of the mathematics he was  learning. Euclid quickly called to his slave to give the boy a coin because he must make gain out of  what he learns. Another story relates that Ptolemy asked the mathematician if there was some easier  way to learn geometry than by learning all the theorems. Euclid replied, There is no royal road to  geometry and sent the king to study.  Euclid's fame comes from his writings, especially his masterpiece Elements. This 13 volume work is  a compilation of Greek mathematics and geometry. It is unknown how much if any of the work  included in Elements is Euclid's original work; many of the theorems found can be traced to  previous thinkers including Euxodus, Thales, Hippocrates and Pythagoras. However, the format of  Elements belongs to him alone. Each volume lists a number of definitions and postulates followed by  theorems, which are followed by proofs using those definitions and postulates. Every statement was  proven, no matter how obvious. Euclid chose his postulates carefully, picking only the most basic  and self-evident propositions as the basis of his work. Before, rival schools each had a different set  of postulates, some of which were very questionable. This format helped standardize Greek  mathematics. As for the subject matter, it ran the gamut of ancient thought. The subjects include: the  transitive property, the Pythagorean theorem, algebraic identities, circles, tangents, plane geometry,  the theory of proportions, prime numbers, perfect numbers, properties of positive integers, irrational  numbers, 3-D figures, inscribed and circumscribed figures, LCD, GCM and the construction of  regular solids. Especially noteworthy subjects include the method of exhaustion, which would be  used by Archimedes in the invention of integral calculus, and the proof that the set of all prime  numbers is infinite.  Elements was translated into both Latin and Arabic and is the earliest similar work to survive,  basically because it is far superior to anything previous. The first printed copy came out in 1482 and  was the geometry textbook and logic primer by the 1700s. During this period Euclid was highly  respected as a mathematician and Elements was considered one of the greatest mathematical works  of all time. The publication was used in schools up to 1903. Euclid also wrote many other works  including Data, On Division, Phaenomena, Optics and the lost books Conics and Porisms.  Today, Euclid has lost much of the godlike status he once held. In his time, many of his peers  attacked him for being too thorough and including self-evident proofs, such as one side of a triangle  cannot be longer than the sum of the other two sides. Today, most mathematicians attack Euclid for  the exact opposite reason that he was not thorough enough. In Elements, there are missing areas  which were forced to be filled in by following mathematicians. In addition, several errors and  questionable ideas have been found. The most glaring one deals with his fifth postulate, also known  as the parallel postulate. The proposition states that for a straight line and a point not on the line,  there is exactly one line that passes through the point parallel to the original line. Euclid was unable to  prove this statement and needing it for his proofs, so he assumed it as true. Future mathematicians  could not accept such a statement was unproveable and spent centuries looking for an answer. Only  with the onset of non- Euclidean geometry, that replaces the statement    
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