The minimal instruments of geometry – I
Warhadpande, Mahit (2022) The minimal instruments of geometry – I. At Right Angles (12). pp. 7-12. ISSN 2582-1873
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Abstract
Euclid’s Elements (~300 BCE) built the edifice of (plane) Geometry using a toolkit comprising of two instruments: the ‘straight edge’ and the ‘collapsible compass’ [1]. Many centuries later (1941 CE), in Basic Geometry, George Birkhoff and Ralph Beatley provided an alternative construction of this edifice using a three-instrument toolkit which contemporary students continue to use: the ‘ruler’, the ‘compass’ and the ‘protractor’ [2]. In contrast, a few centuries before Euclid (~800 BCE), Indian vedic texts (Shulbasutras) recommended the ‘rajju’, i.e., a rope, as the lone instrument to be used for geometrical constructions.
| Item Type: | Articles in APF Magazines |
|---|---|
| Authors: | Warhadpande, Mahit |
| Document Language: | Language English |
| Uncontrolled Keywords: | Euclid, plane geometry, instrument box, ruler, compass, protractor, rope |
| Subjects: | Natural Sciences > Mathematics |
| Divisions: | Azim Premji University - Bengaluru > University Publications > At Right Angles |
| Full Text Status: | Public |
| URI: | http://publications.azimpremjiuniversity.edu.in/id/eprint/3354 |
| Publisher URL: |
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