Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 “Dat Pussle”
- 2 Our Geometric Universe
- 3 Fearful Symmetry
- 4 It's Hip to Be a Square
- 5 Triangles and Friends
- 6 All Polygons Created Equal
- 7 First Steps
- 8 Step Right Up!
- 9 Watch Your Step!
- 10 Just Tessellating
- 11 Plain Out-Stripped
- 12 Strips Teased
- 13 Tessellations Completed
- 14 Maltese Crosses
- 15 Curves Ahead
- 16 Stardom
- 17 Farewell, My Lindgren
- 18 The New Breed
- 19 When Polygons Aren't Regular
- 20 On to Solids
- 21 Cubes Rationalized
- 22 Prisms Reformed
- 23 Cheated, Bamboozled, and Hornswoggled
- 24 Solutions to All Our Problems
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index of Dissections
- General Index
19 - When Polygons Aren't Regular
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 “Dat Pussle”
- 2 Our Geometric Universe
- 3 Fearful Symmetry
- 4 It's Hip to Be a Square
- 5 Triangles and Friends
- 6 All Polygons Created Equal
- 7 First Steps
- 8 Step Right Up!
- 9 Watch Your Step!
- 10 Just Tessellating
- 11 Plain Out-Stripped
- 12 Strips Teased
- 13 Tessellations Completed
- 14 Maltese Crosses
- 15 Curves Ahead
- 16 Stardom
- 17 Farewell, My Lindgren
- 18 The New Breed
- 19 When Polygons Aren't Regular
- 20 On to Solids
- 21 Cubes Rationalized
- 22 Prisms Reformed
- 23 Cheated, Bamboozled, and Hornswoggled
- 24 Solutions to All Our Problems
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index of Dissections
- General Index
Summary
In the early nineteenth century, two lingering difficulties in Euclid's Elements were addressed and resolved. The first was the troubling role of the parallel postulate. Three men, from Germany, Hungary, and Russia, worked in parallel, effectively decomposing and then recomposing geometry. They showed that the postulate is just one of several valid assumptions that can be used in deductive geometry. This at first caused widespread consternation, which metamorphosed over time into acclamation.
The second difficulty was to prove the converse of Euclid's assertion that two polygons have equal area if it is possible to decompose one into pieces that recompose to form the other. Three different men, from Germany, Hungary, and England, worked in parallel to decompose and then recompose polygons. But their result caused no consternation and produced at best fleeting fame. Too bad for dissections that the parallel was not stronger!
The non-Euclidean hyperbolic geometry of Carl Friedrich Gauss, János Bolyai, and Nikolay Lobachevsky first shocked and then revolutionized the mathematical world. The same cannot be said of the dissection work of P. Gerwien, Farkas Bolyai, and William Wallace. But their work does give us a method of dissecting any irregular polygon to any other irregular polygon of equal area, using a finite number of pieces. The methods of Lowry (1814), Wallace (1831), Bolyai (1832), and Gerwien (1833) always work, though they often produce a great abundance of pieces.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- DissectionsPlane and Fancy, pp. 221 - 229Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997