British Versions of Book II of Euclid’s Elements: Geometry, Arithmetic, Algebra (1550–1750)

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This book discusses the changing conceptions about the relationship between geometry and arithmetic within the Euclidean tradition that developed in the British context of the sixteenth and seventeenth century. Its focus is on Book II of the Elements and the ways in which algebraic symbolism and methods, especially as recently introduced by François Viète and his followers, took center stage as mediators between the two realms, and thus offered new avenues to work out that relationship in idiosyncratic ways not found in earlier editions of the Euclidean text.

Texts examined include Robert Recorde's Pathway to Knowledge (1551), Henry Billingsley’s first English translation of the Elements (1570), Clavis Mathematicae by William Oughtred and Artis Analyticae Praxis by Thomas Harriot (both published in 1631), Isaac Barrow’s versions of the Elements (1660), and John Wallis Treatise of Algebra (1685), and the English translations of Claude Dechales’ French Euclidean Elements (1685).

This book offers a completely new perspective of the topic and analyzes mostly unexplored material. It will be of interest to historians of mathematics, mathematicians with an interest in history and historians of renaissance science in general.

Author(s): Leo Corry
Series: SpringerBriefs in History of Science and Technology
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 78
City: Cham

Acknowledgments
Contents
1 Introduction: Euclidean Background
1.1 Book II
1.2 The Early Printed Version of the Elements
1.3 The Rise of Viète’s Symbolic Algebra
References
2 The Main Figures: From Recorde to Wallis and Barrow
2.1 Robert Recorde
2.2 Billingsley and Rudd
2.3 Oughtred and Harriot
2.4 Wallis and Barrow
References
3 Some Lesser-Known Figures
3.1 Leeke and Serle
3.2 Dechales Translated into English
3.3 Alingham
3.4 Henry Hill
3.5 Turn of the Eighteenth Century
References
4 Summary and Concluding Remarks
References