Active in Alexandria in the third century BCE, Apollonius of Perga ranks as one of the greatest Greek geometers. Building on foundations laid by Euclid, he is famous for defining the parabola, hyperbola and ellipse in his major treatise on conic sections. The dense nature of its text, however, made it inaccessible to most readers. When it was originally published in 1896 by the civil servant and classical scholar Thomas Little Heath (1861-1940), the present work was the first English translation and, more importantly, the first serious effort to standardise the terminology and notation. Along with clear diagrams, Heath includes a thorough introduction to the work and the history of the subject. Seeing the treatise as more than an esoteric artefact, Heath presents it as a valuable tool for modern mathematicians. His works on Diophantos of Alexandria (1885) and Aristarchus of Samos (1913) are also reissued in this series.
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and...
An Elementary Treatise On Conic Sections is a book written by Charles Smith in 1883. The book is a comprehensive guide to the study of conic sections, which are curves that result from the...
Despite being generally unknown to the greats of contemporary mathematics, Apollonius’s Conics is said by Chasles to contain ‘the most interesting properties of conics’. Written by one of the great...
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and...
Solutions of the Examples in an Elementary Treatise on Conic Sections offers detailed solutions to the problems presented in an earlier book on conic sections by the same author. This book is a...