Born: About 365 BC in Alexandria, Egypt
Died: About 300 BC
Short Biography
Euclid is
one of the world's most famous mathematicians, yet very little is
known of his life, except that he taught at Ptolemy’s
university at Alexandria, Egypt. Euclid's
Elements, a work on elementary geometry and other topics,
exceeded other works of its time, which are now known only by
indirect reference. The Elements begins with definitions,
postulates, and axioms, including the famous fifth, or parallel,
postulate that one and only one line can be drawn through a point
parallel to a given line. Euclid's decision to make this postulate
not demonstrable assumption led to Euclidean geometry. It was not
until the 19th century that the fifth postulate was modified in
order to develop non-Euclidean geometry.
The Elements are divided into 13 books. The first 6
are on geometry; 7, 8 and 9 are on number theory; and book number
10 is on Eudoxus's theory of irrational numbers. Books 11, 12, and
13 all concern solid geometry, and end with a discussion of the
properties of the five regular polyhedrons and proof that there can
only be these five. Euclid's Elements are remarkable for the
clarity with which the theorems and problems are selected and
ordered. The propositions proceed logically and concisely, with
very few assumptions.

Euclid is not known to have made any original discoveries, and
the Elements is based on the work of the people before him, like
Exodus, Thales, Hippocrates, and Pythagoras. It is accepted that
some of the proofs are his own and that the excellent arrangement
is his. Over a thousand editions of the work have been published
since the first printed version of 1482. Euclid's other works
include Data, On Divisions of Figures, Phaenomena, Optics,
Surface Loci, Porisms, Conics, Book of Fallacies, and
Elements of Music. Only the first four of these have
survived.


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