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A short, simple, and plain method of demonstrating the fifth book of Euclid's Elements
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A short, simple, and plain method of demonstrating the fifth book of Euclid's Elements
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The first Latin translation of Euclid's Elements commonly ascribed to Adelard of Bath
books I-VIII and books X.36-XV.2 -
Philosophy of mathematics and deductive structure in Euclid's elements
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Elementi decimi Euclidis declaratio
necnon De solidis regularibus tractatus -
Euclid in China
the genesis of the first Chinese translation of Euclid's Elements, books I - VI (Jihe yuanben; Beijing, 1607) and its reception up to 1723 -
Euclid
the creation of mathematics -
Praelectiones tresdecim in principium Elementorum Euclidis
Oxonii habitæ M.DC.XX -
Études sur le commentaire de Proclus au premier livre des Éléments d'Euclide
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An examination of the first six books of Euclid's Elements
By William Austin, M. A. Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford -
The rudiments of mathematics
designed for the use of students at the universities: containing an introduction to algebra, remarks on the first six books of Euclid, the elements of plane trigonometry: by W. Ludlam, late Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge -
An appendix to the Elements of Euclid
in seven books. Containing forty-two moveable schemes for forming the various kinds of solids, and their sections, by which the Doctrine of Solids in the Eleventh, Twelfth, and Fifteenth Books of Euclid is illustrated, and rendered more easy to Learners than heretofore. Book I. Contains the Five regular Solids. II. Shews the Inscription and Circumscription thereof, as set forth in the Fifteenth Book of the Elements. III. Exhibits a great Variety of irregular Solids. IV. Contains sundry Sorts of Prisms. V. Various Kinds of Pyramids, and Frustrums thereof. VI. Some difficult Propositions in the Eleventh and Twelfth Books. Vii. The Cone and its several Sections. Second edition. By John Lodge Cowley, F. R. S. Professor of Mathematicks in the Royal Academy at Woolwich