Dedomena: Euclid's Data, Or, The Importance of Being Given

Front Cover
Museum Tusculanum Press, 2003 - Literary Collections - 271 pages
This is a scholarly contribution to an area -- the history of Greek geometrical analysis -- that is still insufficiently understood. At the time of Zeuthen, and even up to the middle of the last century, it was fashionable to treat the Data algebraically. Taisbak has abandoned this approach completely, arguing that it does nothing to help us to understand either the development of the work or the reasons for its having been copied, studied, and quoted for more than two millennia. We must bear a queer sort of frustration that affects us everywhere in the Data: we get very little information, hardly any 'knowledge' of the givens. And why not? Probably because 'knowing' geometrical objects was problematic in those days when the concept of 'given' came into being, and the consequences of incommensurability was just being understood. Next to nothing is known of these items, and very little that is worth knowing: length, size, distance -- any of the attributes that can be spoken of by means of numbers. Although there have been two recent translations of the Data, this one is unique in providing, as well, an extensive commentary, which provides the insights gained from three decades of studying the work. The book is meant as a coherent and understandable account of what could have been going on in Euclid's mind, and some reasons for believing that that is what actually was going on in his mind.
 

Contents

Preface
9
Introduction
13
Magnitudes and Ratio I Dt 19
37
By a Given Greater than in Ratio Dt 1021 5557
57
Magnitudes and Ratio II Dt 2224
85
Position Distance Direction Parallels Dt 2538
93
Form Triangles and Polygons Dt 3955
115
Equiangular parallelograms I Reciprocal proportion Dt 56
147
Ratio and Angles Dt 6367
165
Duplicates and Outsiders Dt 7683
191
Application of areas II Dt 8485
207
Circles Dt 8794
225
Appendix A Marinus Commentary
241
Select Bibliography
267
Copyright

About the author (2003)

Christian Marinus Taisbak recently retired as an associate professor in the Department of Greek and Latin at the University of Copenhagen.

Bibliographic information