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5.4: Footnotes

  • Page ID
    47622
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    1

    The antithesis of the “analytical” method is the “synthesis, in which the solution is constructed directly, after which this solution is shown to be indeed valid.” This is the proof style of Euclid’s Elements, and since antiquity there has been the consistent complaint that this makes it more difficult than necessary to understand the work: the student sees well that each step of a proof is correct, and therefore has to accept the end result as irrefutable—but one does not understand the reasons that make the author take the single step. In this way, the author appears shrewd rather than really pedagogical. Since antiquity Euclid (or his predecessors) have also been suspected to have first found their constructions and proofs by means of analysis, constructing the solution in the second instance but hiding their traces.

    2

    The text uses the same verb “to tear out” as for the subtractive operation.

    3

    The statement also refers to “1 the dirt that I have torn out,” but this information is not used. It is another example of a magnitude that is known but not given; knowing its numerical value allows the teacher to make a distinction between the real excavation (“1 the dirt”) and the volume of the excavation extended downwards by 1 kùš (“\(1^{\circ} 10^{\prime}\), the dirt”).

    4

    In order to have integers we here introduce \(P = 60\) \(p=1`p\), \(Q = 1`q\), \(R = 1`r\). Then \(P Q R=1``` p q r=10`` 4` 48\).


    This page titled 5.4: Footnotes is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jens Høyrup via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.

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