Geometry Made Easy Or A New And Methodical Explanation Of The Elemnets I E Elements Of Geometry Containing Euclid S Elements And The Most Material Propositions Of Archimedes Concerning The Cylinder Cone And Sphere A Concise Treatise Of Algebra And Its Application To Geometry And An Introduction To Conic Sections From The French With Several Additions And Amendments By John Lodge Cowley Teacher Of Mathematics

Download Geometry Made Easy Or A New And Methodical Explanation Of The Elemnets I E Elements Of Geometry Containing Euclid S Elements And The Most Material Propositions Of Archimedes Concerning The Cylinder Cone And Sphere A Concise Treatise Of Algebra And Its Application To Geometry And An Introduction To Conic Sections From The French With Several Additions And Amendments By John Lodge Cowley Teacher Of Mathematics PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Geometry Made Easy Or A New And Methodical Explanation Of The Elemnets I E Elements Of Geometry Containing Euclid S Elements And The Most Material Propositions Of Archimedes Concerning The Cylinder Cone And Sphere A Concise Treatise Of Algebra And Its Application To Geometry And An Introduction To Conic Sections From The French With Several Additions And Amendments By John Lodge Cowley Teacher Of Mathematics book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.
5000 Years of Geometry

The present volume provides a fascinating overview of geometrical ideas and perceptions from the earliest cultures to the mathematical and artistic concepts of the 20th century. It is the English translation of the 3rd edition of the well-received German book “5000 Jahre Geometrie,” in which geometry is presented as a chain of developments in cultural history and their interaction with architecture, the visual arts, philosophy, science and engineering. Geometry originated in the ancient cultures along the Indus and Nile Rivers and in Mesopotamia, experiencing its first “Golden Age” in Ancient Greece. Inspired by the Greek mathematics, a new germ of geometry blossomed in the Islamic civilizations. Through the Oriental influence on Spain, this knowledge later spread to Western Europe. Here, as part of the medieval Quadrivium, the understanding of geometry was deepened, leading to a revival during the Renaissance. Together with parallel achievements in India, China, Japan and the ancient American cultures, the European approaches formed the ideas and branches of geometry we know in the modern age: coordinate methods, analytical geometry, descriptive and projective geometry in the 17th an 18th centuries, axiom systems, geometry as a theory with multiple structures and geometry in computer sciences in the 19th and 20th centuries. Each chapter of the book starts with a table of key historical and cultural dates and ends with a summary of essential contents of geometr y in the respective era. Compelling examples invite the reader to further explore the problems of geometry in ancient and modern times. The book will appeal to mathematicians interested in Geometry and to all readers with an interest in cultural history. From letters to the authors for the German language edition I hope it gets a translation, as there is no comparable work. Prof. J. Grattan-Guinness (Middlesex University London) "Five Thousand Years of Geometry" - I think it is the most handsome book I have ever seen from Springer and the inclusion of so many color plates really improves its appearance dramatically! Prof. J.W. Dauben (City University of New York) An excellent book in every respect. The authors have successfully combined the history of geometry with the general development of culture and history. ... The graphic design is also excellent. Prof. Z. Nádenik (Czech Technical University in Prague)
The History of Mathematical Proof in Ancient Traditions

Author: Karine Chemla
language: en
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Release Date: 2012-07-05
This radical, profoundly scholarly book explores the purposes and nature of proof in a range of historical settings. It overturns the view that the first mathematical proofs were in Greek geometry and rested on the logical insights of Aristotle by showing how much of that view is an artefact of nineteenth-century historical scholarship. It documents the existence of proofs in ancient mathematical writings about numbers and shows that practitioners of mathematics in Mesopotamian, Chinese and Indian cultures knew how to prove the correctness of algorithms, which are much more prominent outside the limited range of surviving classical Greek texts that historians have taken as the paradigm of ancient mathematics. It opens the way to providing the first comprehensive, textually based history of proof.