Four Pillars of Geometry (e-bog) af Stillwell, John
Stillwell, John (forfatter)

Four Pillars of Geometry e-bog

329,95 DKK (inkl. moms 412,44 DKK)
Many people think there is only one &quote;right&quote; way to teach geometry. For two millennia, the &quote;right&quote; way was Euclid's way, and it is still good in many respects. But in the 1950s the cry &quote;Down with triangles!&quote; was heard in France and new geometry books appeared, packed with linear algebra but with no diagrams. Was this the new &quote;right&quote; way, or was the...
E-bog 329,95 DKK
Forfattere Stillwell, John (forfatter)
Forlag Springer
Udgivet 29 december 2005
Genrer PBF
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9780387290522
Many people think there is only one "e;right"e; way to teach geometry. For two millennia, the "e;right"e; way was Euclid's way, and it is still good in many respects. But in the 1950s the cry "e;Down with triangles!"e; was heard in France and new geometry books appeared, packed with linear algebra but with no diagrams. Was this the new "e;right"e; way, or was the "e;right"e; way something else again, perhaps transformation groups? In this book, I wish to show that geometry can be developed in four fundamentally different ways, and that all should be used if the subject is to be shown in all its splendor. Euclid-style construction and axiomatics seem the best way to start, but linear algebra smooths the later stages by replacing some tortuous arguments by simple calculations. And how can one avoid projective geometry? It not only explains why objects look the way they do; it also explains why geometry is entangled with algebra. Finally, one needs to know that there is not one geometry, but many, and transformation groups are the best way to distinguish between them. Two chapters are devoted to each approach: The ?rst is concrete and introductory, whereas the second is more abstract. Thus, the ?rst chapter on Euclid is about straightedge and compass constructions; the second is about axioms and theorems. The ?rst chapter on linear algebra is about coordinates; the second is about vector spaces and the inner product.