Geometry: Euclid and Beyond

Geometry: Euclid and Beyond by Robin Hartshorne, published by Springer Science & Business Media on September 28, 2005, is a comprehensive exploration of classical geometries designed for junior and senior-level students. This edition spans 528 pages and is presented in English. The book is rooted in the author’s teaching experience, beginning with a critical examination of Euclid’s Elements, while assuming familiarity with high-school geometry and some abstract algebra.
Readers will find a structured approach to the questions that arise from Euclid’s text, alongside modern answers. The book delves into Hilbert’s axioms to reinforce foundational concepts and employs the Cartesian plane as an analytic model. Topics such as the theory of area, geometrical constructions through field extensions, and the investigation of the parallel postulate are discussed, leading to an understanding of non-Euclidean geometries. The final chapter addresses the five Platonic solids, completing the exploration of topics essential for a one-semester course.
Official synopsis Publisher
In recent years, I have been teaching a junior-senior-level course on the classi cal geometries. This book has grown out of that teaching experience. I assume only high-school geometry and some abstract algebra. The course begins in Chapter 1 with a critical examination of Euclid’s Elements. Students are expected to read concurrently Books I-IV of Euclid’s text, which must be obtained sepa rately. The remainder of the book is an exploration of questions that arise natu rally from this reading, together with their modern answers. To shore up the foundations we use Hilbert’s axioms. The Cartesian plane over a field provides an analytic model of the theory, and conversely, we see that one can introduce coordinates into an abstract geometry. The theory of area is analyzed by cutting figures into triangles. The algebra of field extensions provides a method for deciding which geometrical constructions are possible. The investigation of the parallel postulate leads to the various non-Euclidean geometries. And in the last chapter we provide what is missing from Euclid’s treatment of the five Platonic solids in Book XIII of the Elements. For a one-semester course such as I teach, Chapters 1 and 2 form the core material, which takes six to eight weeks.
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