Euclid: The Creation of Mathematics Corrected Edition
| Benno Artmann (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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Euclid presents the essential of mathematics in a manner which has set a high standard for more than 2000 years. This book, an explanation of the nature of mathematics from its most important early source, is for all lovers of mathematics with a solid background in high school geometry, whether they be students or university professors.
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Editorial Reviews
Review
B. Artmann
Euclid - The Creation of Mathematics
"The author invites the ‘lover of mathematics’ to have a peek, via a gentle introduction and presentation of Euclid’s Elements, with detours to previous Greek geometers, whose work has been incorporated in the Elements. The contents of the Elements are presented book by book . . . with full statements of the definitions, axioms, propositions, and proofs involved. There are . . . notes to subsequent development of Euclidean themes . . . justifications of steps of proof and of the sequence in which results appear . . . An original and pleasing feature of the book consists in the references to Greek architecture, which emphasize the pervasiveness of the concern for proportion in Greek culture, as well as the references to archaeological finds of dodecahedra- and icosahedra-shaped objects."―AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY
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Product details
- ASIN : 0387984232
- Publisher : Springer; Corrected edition (June 10, 1999)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 343 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9780387984230
- ISBN-13 : 978-0387984230
- Item Weight : 3.37 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.14 x 0.81 x 9.21 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,303,687 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,077 in Geometry (Books)
- #1,815 in Mathematics History
- #2,272 in Geometry & Topology (Books)
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To Artmann's credit, his book disregards the smallscale disputes amongst superspecialists ("all modern translations of Elements are satisfactory"). He overturns the fashionable idea that the "Two Cultures" cannot communicate. So, Rilke has something to say -- perhaps not to Hilbert, but to the widely cultured mathematician, or to the general reader -- about Contradiction, or Widerspruch.
About the pre-Euclidean origins of mathematics in Greece, he overmodestly disclaims specialist knowledge. An example: he traces the earliest technical work on the dodecahedron and the icosahedron via pre-Euclideans such as Theaetetus (Plato's friend), and up to the highly abstract Group Theory work on isomorphisms of the 1990s A.D. -- and does this well and surefootedly. Too bad his modesty barred him ("I leave that to the specialists") from analyzing the pre-history of Euclid's Book XII, the classical ancestor of our integral calculus. The fact is that he knows a great deal about Eudoxus (another friend of Plato's). Perhaps more detail in a Second Edition?
His work on the so-called Euclidean Algorithm (finding a greatest common factor) is another valuable contribution. Its autobiographical flavor is reminiscent of Archimedes in "Sand Reckoner". It allows him to stake out a clear and non-partisan position on the "where is the algebra?" question, on which scholarly debates often produce more heat than light.
So multi-faceted a book, one could wish an Index fuller than a mere 2 pages. Typos are too frequent for a good house like Springer, including two I found in names of authors or book titles. But the book's cultural sweep is admirable throughout, its bibliography good.
TL Heath's 1933 report about the Cambridge undergraduate, so struck by Euclid ("a book to be read in bed or on a holiday") may have been exaggerated, making him over into a Young Werther. But Artmann's charming and learned book really is hard to put down, on or off holiday.
[note: this is a lightly revised version of a review I submitted a few days ago. -Malcolm Brown]
