Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Note to the Reader
- NEW MATHEMATICAL LIBRARY
- Dedication
- Preface
- Contents
- Chapter 1 Points and Lines Connected with a Triangle
- Chapter 2 Some Properties of Circles
- Chapter 3 Collinearity and Concurrence
- Chapter 4 Transformations
- Chapter 5 An Introduction to Inversive Geometry
- Chapter 6 An Introduction to Projective Geometry
- Hints and Answers to Exercises
- References
- Glossary
- Index
Chapter 2 - Some Properties of Circles
- Frontmatter
- Note to the Reader
- NEW MATHEMATICAL LIBRARY
- Dedication
- Preface
- Contents
- Chapter 1 Points and Lines Connected with a Triangle
- Chapter 2 Some Properties of Circles
- Chapter 3 Collinearity and Concurrence
- Chapter 4 Transformations
- Chapter 5 An Introduction to Inversive Geometry
- Chapter 6 An Introduction to Projective Geometry
- Hints and Answers to Exercises
- References
- Glossary
- Index
Summary
Although the Greeks worked fruitfully, not only in geometry but also in the most varied fields of mathematics, nevertheless we today have gone beyond them everywhere and certainly also in geometry.
F. KleinThe circle has been held in highest esteem through the ages. Its perfect form has affected philosophers and astronomers alike. Until Kepler derived his laws, the thought that planets might move in anything but circular paths was unthinkable. Nowadays, the words “square”, “line”, and the like sometimes have derogatory connotations, but the circle—never. Cleared of superstitious nonsense and pseudo-science, it still stands out, as estimable as ever.
Limitations of space make it impossible for us to present more than a few of the most interesting properties developed since Euclid of the circle and its relation to triangles and other polygons.
The power of a point with respect to a circle
We begin our investigations by recalling two of Euclid's theorems: III.35, about the product of the parts into which two chords of a circle divide each other (that is, in the notation of Figure 2.1A, PA × PA′ = PB × PB′), and III.36, comparing a. secant and a tangent drawn from the same point P outside the circle (in Figure 2.1B, PA × PA′ = PT2).
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- Geometry Revisited , pp. 27 - 50Publisher: Mathematical Association of AmericaPrint publication year: 1967
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