Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T09:08:31.689Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The place of geometry in a mathematical education

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2016

J. V. Armitage*
Affiliation:
Shell Centre for Mathematical Education, The University, Nottingham NG7 2RD

Extract

It is a commonplace that pictures leave a deeper impress on the human mind than abstractions and, in spite of its abstract nature, that is also true of many part? of mathematics. A proof of a theorem or the construction of a counter-example is often suggested by pictorial considerations, and that is true of algebra and analysis as well as of obviously geometrical subjects like topology. (For entertaining examples see Professor J. E. Littlewood’s book [1].) There is obviously a connection between a developed geometrical intuition of that kind and the kind of spatial experience which ought to be furnished by a school mathematics course. No one would deny its importance and the writers of textbooks on ‘modern’ mathematics are well aware of the need to stimulate geometrical intuition. What has been called in question is the relation between that kind of geometrical intuition and the formal treatment of the euclidean plane based, albeit insecurely, on Euclid’s Elements. Indeed, the traditional treatment has been abandoned with indecent haste and without serious question. In Part I of this paper we make a plea for a re-consideration of the case for some kind of formal geometry as an indispensable part of the education of the more mathematically able children.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Mathematical Association 1973

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Littlewood, J. E., A mathematician’s miscellany. Methuen (1953).Google Scholar
2. Mathematical Association reports on the teaching of geometry in schools. Bell (1923, 1939, 1953).Google Scholar
3. Roth, L., Modem elementary geometry. Nelson (1948).Google Scholar
4. School Mathematics Project, Books A-H. Cambridge University Press (1968-1972).Google Scholar
5. Hilbert, D., Grundlagen der Geometrie (7th edition). Teubner, (Leipzig, Berlin, 1930); published in English translation by Open Court (Chicago, 1930).Google Scholar
6. Coxeter, H. S. M., Introduction to geometry. Wiley (1961).Google Scholar
7. Longuet-Higgins, M. S., Clifford’s chain and its analogues in relation to the higher polytopes, Proc. R. Soc. A, 330, 443466 (1972). [See also p. 293 of this Gazette. D.A.Q.].Google Scholar
8. Thom, R., Les mathematiques ‘modernes’: une erreur pedagogique et philosophique?, L’âge de la science 3, No. 3, 225236, Dunod Ed. (Paris); shorter version in English in Am. Scient. 59, 695699 (1971).Google Scholar
9. Nevanlinna, R., Space, time and relativity. Addison-Wesley (1968).Google Scholar
10. Bourbaki, N., Eléments d’histoire des mathematiques, 158173. Hermann (Paris, 1969).Google Scholar
11. Youd, N., An original solution of a problem in calculus, Math. Spectrum 3, 1721 (1970-71).Google Scholar
12. Fletcher, T. J., Linear algebra through its applications. Van Nostrand (1972).Google Scholar
13. Powell, M. T. and Tyrrell, J. A., A theorem in circle geometry, Bull. Lond. Math. Soc. (1971).Google Scholar
14. Coxeter, H. S. M., Twelve geometric essays. Southern Illinois University Press (1968).Google Scholar
15. Milne, E. A., Kinematic relativity. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
16. Feynmann, R. P., Lectures on physics. Addison-Wesley (1970).Google Scholar
17. Heath, T. L., Euclid’s Elements. Cambridge University Press (1908); reprinted Dover (New York, 1956).Google Scholar
18. Baker, H. F., The teaching of geometry in schools, Mathl Gaz. XII, 7377 (No. 170, May 1924); reprinted in the Centenary issue LV, 146152 (No. 392, March 1971).Google Scholar
19. Kaplansky, I., Linear algebra and geometry. Allyn and Bacon (Boston, 1969).Google Scholar
20. Semple, J. G. and Roth, L., Algebraic geometry. Oxford University Press (1949).Google Scholar
21. Mumford, D., Introduction to algebraic geometry (in preparation), first three chapters. Harvard Lecture Notes.Google Scholar
22. Jenner, W. E., Rudiments of algebraic geometry. Oxford University Press (1963).Google Scholar
23. Cartan, E., Lecons sur la giomitrie des espaces de Riemann. Gauthier-Villars (Paris, 1928).Google Scholar
24. Walker, R. J., Algebraic curves. Princeton University Press (1930).Google Scholar