Summary
The volumes of which this is the first have the purpose of introducing the reader to those parts of geometry which precede the theory of higher plane curves and of irrational surfaces. The present volume is devoted to the indispensable logical preliminaries. It assumes only those relations of position, for points, lines and planes, which, furnished with a pencil, a ruler, some rods and some string, a student may learn by drawing diagrams and making models. It seeks to set these relations in an ordered framework of deduction, gradually rendered comprehensive and precise enough to include all the subsequent theory; to this end it puts aside, at first, most of those intricate details which make up the burden of what is generally called elementary geometry. That such a plan can be carried through, thanks to the work of many generations of thinkers, is well enough known; and experience has shewn that many students, especially of the class who look forward to becoming Engineers or Physicists, to whom the geometry of the usual text-books is tiresome, find such a course stimulating and easy, when the matter is properly presented to them. The mathematician who has followed such a course will find that he has no cause to think he has learnt the wrong things. The fundamental theorems in this method of approaching the subject are indeed of Greek origin; only, these are here made to lead to general principles, giving a command of detail unknown to the Greeks.
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- Information
- Principles of Geometry , pp. vii - viiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1922