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Book cover of The Thirteen Books of the Elements, Vol. 2
Mathematics

The Thirteen Books of the Elements, Vol. 2

by Euclid
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Overview

This is the definitive edition of one of the very greatest classics of all time β€” the full Euclid, not an abridgement.

Synopsis

This is the definitive edition of one of the very greatest classics of all time β€” the full Euclid, not an abridgement. Using the text established by Heiberg, Sir Thomas Heath encompasses almost 2,500 years of mathematical and historical study upon Euclid. This unabridged republication of the original enlarged edition contains the complete English text of all 13 books of the Elements, plus a critical apparatus that analyzes each definition, postulate, and proposition in great detail. It covers textual and linguistic matters; mathematical analyses of Euclid’s ideas; classical, medieval, Renaissance, modern commentators; refutations, supports, extrapolations, reinterpretations, and historical notes, all given with extensive quotes. β€œThe textbook that shall really replace Euclid has not yet been written and probably never will be.” β€” Encyclopaedia Britannica. Volume 1. 151-page Introduction: life and other works of Euclid; Greek and Islamic commentators; surviving mss., scholia, translations; bases of Euclid’s thought. Books I and II of the Elements, straight lines, angles, intersection of lines, triangles, parallelograms, etc. Volume 2. Books III-IX: Circles, tangents, segments, figures described around and within circles, rations, proportions, magnitudes, polygons, prime numbers, products, plane and solid numbers, series of rations, etc. Volume 3. Books X to XIII: planes, solid angles, etc.; method of exhaustion in similar polygons within circles, pyramids, cones, cylinders, spheres, etc. Appendix: Books XIV, XV, sometimes ascribed to Euclid.

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Book Details

Published
June 1, 1956
Publisher
Dover Publications
Pages
468
ISBN
9780486600895

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