Title: The%20Elements,%20Book%20I%20
1The Elements, Book I Highlights and Comments
2The 5 Common Notions
- Things that are equal to the same thing are equal
to one another. - If equals be added to equals, the wholes are
equal. - If equals be subtracted from equals, the
remainders are equal. - Things that coincide with one another are equal
to one another. - The whole is greater than the part.
3The First Four Postulates
- (It is possible) to draw a straight line from any
point to any point. - (It is possible) to produce any finite straight
line continuously in a straight line. - (It is possible) to describe a circle with any
center and distance. - All right angles are congruent to one another.
4The Fifth Postulate
- 5. If a straight line falling on two straight
lines makes the angles on the same side less than
two right angles, the two straight lines, if
produced indefinitely, meet on that side on which
are the angles less than the two right angles.
5The situation in Postulate 5
6After Producing the lines sufficiently far,
7Comments
- Postulates 1, 2, and 3 describe the constructions
possible with an (unmarked) straightedge and a
collapsing compass that is the compass can be
used to draw circles but not to measure or
transfer distances - Postulate 4 is a statement about the homogeneous
nature of the plane every right angle at one
point is congruent to a right angle at any other
point - Postulate 5 is both more complicated than, and
less obvious than the others(!)
8Proposition 1
- To construct on a given line segment AB an
equilateral triangle. - Construction
- Using Postulate 3, construct the circle with
center A and radius AB, then the circle with
center B and radius AB. - Let C be one of the points of intersection of the
two circles - Using Postulate 1, connect AC and BC by line
segments - Then ?ABC is equilateral.
9The Accompanying Figure
10The Proof
- AC AB, since radii of a circle are all equal
(this was stipulated in the definition of a
circle). - Similarly BC AB.
- Therefore, AC BC (Common Notion 1)
- Hence ?ABC is equilateral (again, this was given
as a definition previously). QEF
11A Question
- How do we know that such a point C exists?
- We don't (!) It does not follow from any of
the Postulates that Euclid set out at the start
we would need additional postulates to assure
this. - Euclid is clearly appealing to our intuition
about physical circles here and either does not
realize that there is something missing, or does
not want to address that point at this stage of
the development. He doesn't come back to it
later either(!)
12Propositions 2 and 3
- These are somewhat technical constructions aimed
at showing that the straightedge and collapsing
compass are sufficient for routine tasks such as
measuring off a given length on a given line. - Proposition 2. Given a line segment AB and a
point P, construct a point X such that PX AB. - The construction uses Proposition 1 and Postulate
3 - Proposition 3. Given two unequal line segments,
lay off on the greater a line segment equal to
the smaller. - This construction uses Proposition 2 and
Postulate 3 again, but without using the compass
to transfer the length
13A natural Question
- Its natural to ask Why did Euclid go to the
trouble of making these somewhat involved
constructions for relatively simple tasks that
would be easy if we had an implement like the
modern compass that can be used to measure and
transfer lengths in a construction? - The answer seems to be that his goal was to show
that a very small set of simple starting
assumptions was sufficient to develop the basic
facts of geometry. - So some technical stuff would be acceptable at
the start to establish routines for those tasks
under the more restrictive working conditions or
hypotheses.
14The SAS Congruence Criterion
- Proposition 4. Two triangles are congruent if
two sides of one triangle are congruent with two
sides of the other triangle, and the included
angles are also congruent. - The proof given amounts to saying move the
first triangle until the sides bounding the two
equal angles coincide, then the third sides must
coincide too. - This idea gives a valid proof, of course, but it
again raises a question What in the Postulates
says we can move any figure? Again, there are
unstated assumptions being used here(!)
15The Pons Asinorum
- Proposition 5. In any isosceles triangle, the
base angles are equal also the angles formed by
the extensions of the sides and the base are
equal. - Construction
- Let the triangle be ?ABC with CA CB
- Extend CA to D (Postulate 2)
- On the extension of CB, lay off a line segment CE
with CE CD (Proposition 3) - Draw BD and AE (Postulate 1)
16Figure for Proposition 5
17Start of proof of Proposition 5
- By the construction CD CE, and CA CB by
hypothesis. Moreover ? ACE ? BCD. - Hence ?DCB ? ?ECA (Proposition 4)
- It follows that BD AE, ? CBD ?CAE, and
? CDB ? CEA (corresponding parts of
congruent triangles) - Then since CE CD and CA CB, we also have AD
BE (Common Notion 3) - Therefore, ?AEB ? ?BDA (Proposition 4 note the
angle at D is the same as the angle at E from the
third line above.)
18Conclusion of proof of Proposition 5
- This shows that ? DAB ? EBA, which is the
second part of the statement of the Proposition. - To finish the proof we must show that the base
angles in ?CAB are equal. - ? EAB ? DBA from the congruence of the small
triangles at the bottom of the figure. - But also ? EAC ? DBC by the first congruence
established before. - Hence ? BAC ? EAC - ? EAB ? DBC - ? DBA ?
ABC (Common Notion 3). QED
19Propositions 6 and 7
- First, a converse of Proposition 5
- Proposition 6. If two angles of a triangle are
equal, then the sides opposite those angles are
equal. - Euclid gives a proof by contradiction, using
Propositions 3 and 4. Next - Proposition 7. If in the triangles ?ABC and
?ABD, with C and D on the same side of AB, we
have AC AD and BC BD, then C D. - Another proof by contradiction, using Proposition
5 Euclid gives only one case out of several.
20Proposition 8
- Proposition 8. If the three sides of one
triangle are equal to the three sides of another
triangle, then the triangles are congruent. - This is the SSS congruence criterion
- Proof is based on Proposition 7 in fact can
almost see that Euclid wanted to present the
reasoning broken down into easier steps by
doing it this way. - Modern mathematicians call a result used
primarily to prove something else a lemma.
21Next, a sequence of bread-and-butter
constructions
- Proposition 9. To bisect a given angle.
- Construction
- Given the angle at A, determine on the sides two
points B,C with AB AC - Construct the equilateral triangle ?BCD
(Proposition 1) - Then AD bisects the angle.
- (Note This is probably slightly different from
the way you learned to do this. Can you see
why?)
22Angle Bisection The Construction
23Angle Bisection The Proof
- Proof AB AC by construction.
- BD CD since the triangle ?BCD is equilateral
- AD is common to the two triangles ?ABD and
- ?ACD
- Therefore, ?ABD and ?ACD are congruent
(Proposition 8). - Hence ltADB ltADC, and we have done what we set
out to do the angle at A is bisected. QEF
24Line Segment Bisection
- Proposition 10. To bisect a given line segment.
- Construction Let AB be the given line segment
- Using Proposition 1, construct the equilateral
triangle ?ABC - Using Proposition 9, bisect the angle at C
- Let D be the intersection of the angle bisector
and AB. Then D bisects AB.
25Line Segment Bisection Proof
- Proof
- AC BC since ?ABC is equilateral
- ltACD ltBCD since CD bisects ltACB
- The side CD is in both triangles ?ACD and ?BCD
- Therefore, ?ACD and ?BCD are congruent by
Proposition 4. - Hence AD BD since the corresponding parts of
congruent triangles are equal. QEF
26Erecting a perpendicular
- Proposition 11. To construct a line at right
angles to a given line from a point on the line. - Construction is closely related to Proposition
10 - Given point A on the line, use Postulate 3 to
construct two other points on the line B, C with
AB AC. - Construct an equilateral triangle ?BCD
(Proposition 1) - Then DA is perpendicular to the line at A.
27Dropping a perpendicular
- Proposition 12. To drop a perpendicular to a
given line from a point not on the line. - Construction Given point A not on the line and
P on the other side of the line, use Postulate 3
to construct a circle with radius AP and center A
it intersects the line in points B, C with AB
AC. - Let D be the midpoint of BC (Proposition 10)
- Then DA is perpendicular to the line at D.
- Proof ?ADB and ?ADC are congruent by
Proposition 8 (SSS). Hence ltADB ltADC are
right angles. QEF
28A group of propositions about angles
- Proposition 13. If from a point on a line a ray
is drawn, then this ray forms with the line two
angles whose sum is the same as two right angles.
- Proof Say the ray starts at point B on the
line, P,Q are on the line on opposite sides of B
and A is on the ray. - If ltPBA ltQBA then the two angles are right
angles (given as a Definition by Euclid). - Otherwise, use Proposition 11 to erect a
perpendicular to the line at B, and take C on the
perpendicular. - Then reasoning with Common Notions 1 and 2, ltPBA
ltQBA ltPBC lt QBC so equal to two right
angles. QED
29A group of propositions about angles, continued
- Proposition 14. If two angles have a side in
common, and if the noncommon sides are on
different sides of the common side, and if the
angles are together equal to two right angles,
then the noncommon sides lie along the same
straight line. - This is a converse of Proposition 13. The
reasoning is similar in that it is based just on
the Common Notions. - Note Euclid did not consider 180 (straight)
angles as angles the equivalent for him was the
angle described by two right angles together
not a huge difference, of course, but it affected
the way a number of statements were stated and
proved.
30A group of propositions about angles, continued
- Proposition 15. Vertical angles are equal.
- Note these are the opposite angles formed by
the intersections of two lines like ltCPD and
ltAPB
31A group of propositions about angles, continued
- Proof ltBPC ltCPD is the same as two right
angles by Proposition 13. Similarly for ltAPB
ltBPC. Hence ltCPD ltBPC ltAPB lt BPC by
Postulate 4. Therefore, ltCPD ltAPB by Common
Notion 3. QED
32A group of propositions about angles, continued
- Proposition 16. In a triangle, an exterior angle
is greater than either of the nonadjacent
interior angles. - The statement is that ltDCB is greater than ltCAB,
ltCBA
33Proof of Proposition 16
- Euclid's proof is clever! To show ltDBA is
greater than ltBAC - Construct the midpoint E of AC (Proposition 10)
and extend BE to BF with BE EF (Postulate 2 and
Proposition 3). Construct CF (Postulate 1).
Note that ltAEB ltFEC by Proposition 15.
34Proof of Proposition 16, concluded
- Therefore ?AEB and ?CEF are congruent
(Proposition 4 SAS). Hence ltBAE ltECF. - But ltECF is a part of the exterior angle ltDCA.
So the exterior angle is larger (Common Notion
5). QED - A similar argument shows ltDCA is larger than lt
ABC.
35Proposition 17
- Proposition 17. In any triangle, the sum of any
two angles is less than two right angles. - This follows pretty immediately from Proposition
16 and Proposition 13 (which says that the
interior and exterior angles sum to two right
angles). - Note that Euclid has not yet proved that the sum
of all the angles in a triangle is equal to two
right angles (or 180). So he cannot use any
facts related to that yet. - The angle sum theorem is coming later, in
Proposition 32, after facts about parallel lines
have been established. - We will skip lightly over the next group of
propositions important for geometry, but off
our main track here(!)
36Sides in triangles
- Proposition 18. In a triangle, if one side is
greater than another side, then the angle
opposite the larger side is larger than the angle
opposite the smaller side. - Proposition 19. In a triangle, if one angle is
greater than another angle, the side opposite the
greater angle is larger than the side opposite
the smaller angle. - Proposition 20. In a triangle, the sum of any
two sides is greater than the third side. - We will omit Propositions 21, 24 entirely.
-
37Constructing triangles and angles
- Proposition 22. To construct a triangle if the
three sides are given. - The idea should be clear given one side, find
the third corner by intersecting two circles
(Postulate 3). This only works if the statement
of Proposition 20 holds. - Proposition 23. To construct with a given ray as
a side an angle that is congruent to a given
angle - This is based on finding a triangle with the
given angle (connecting suitable points using
Postulate 2), then applying Proposition 22. -
38Additional triangle congruences
- Proposition 26. Two triangles are congruent if
- One side and the two adjacent angles of one
triangle are equal to one side and the two
adjacent angles of the other triangle - One side, one adjacent angle, and the opposite
angle of one triangle are equal to one side, one
adjacent angle, and the opposite angle of the
other triangle. - Both statements here are cases of the AAS
congruence criterion as usually taught today in
high school geometry. Euclid's proof here does
not use motion in the same way that his proof of
the SAS criterion (Proposition 4) did. -
39Theory of parallels
- Proposition 27. If two lines are intersected by
a third line so that the alternate interior
angles are congruent, then the two lines are
parallel. - As for us, parallel lines for Euclid are lines
that, even if produced indefinitely, never
intersect - Say the two lines are AB and CD and the third
line is EF as in the following diagram
40Proposition 27, continued
-
- The claim is that if ltAEF ltDFE, then the lines
AB and CD, even if extended indefinitely, never
intersect. - Proof Suppose they did intersect at some point
G
41Proposition 27, concluded
-
- Then the exterior angle ltAEF is equal to the
opposite interior angle ltEFG in the triangle
?EFG. - But that contradicts Proposition 16. Therefore
there can be no such point G. QED
42Parallel criteria
- Proposition 28. If two lines AB and CD are cut
by third line EF, then AB and CD are parallel if
either - Two corresponding angles are congruent, or
- Two of the interior angles on the same side of
the transversal sum to two right angles.
43Parallel criteria
- Proposition 28. If two lines AB and CD are cut
by third line EF, then AB and CD are parallel if
either - Two corresponding angles are congruent, or
- Two of the interior angles on the same side of
the transversal sum to two right angles.
44Parallel criteria
Proof (a) Suppose for instance that ltGEB
ltGFD. By Proposition 15, ltGEB ltAEH. So ltGFD
ltAEH (Common Notion 1). Hence AB and CD are
parallel by Proposition 27.
45Parallel criteria
Proof (b) Now suppose for instance that ltHEB
ltGFD 2 right angles. We also have ltHEB lt HEA
2 right angles by Proposition 13. Hence ltGFD
ltHEA (Common Notion 3). Therefore AB and CD are
parallel by Proposition 27. QED
46Familiar facts about parallels
Proposition 29. If two parallel lines are cut by
a third line, then (a) the alternate interior
angles are congruent, (b) corresponding angles
are congruent, (c) the sum of two interior angles
on the same side is equal to 2 right angles.
47Familiar facts about parallels
Proof of (c) The claim is that, for instance,
if AB and CD are parallel, then ltBEHltDFG 2
right angles. Suppose not. If the sum is less,
then Postulate 5 implies the lines meet on that
side of GH. But this is impossible since AB and
CD are parallel. If the sum is greater, then
since ltBEH ltGEA and lt DFG ltHFC (Proposition
15), while ltGEA ltAEH 2 right angles ltHFC
CFG (Proposition 13), then ltAEH ltCFG is less
than 2 right angles, and Postulate 5 implies the
lines meet on the other side. QED
48Comments about Proposition 29
- This is the first use of Postulate 5 in Book I of
the Elements - It is almost as if Euclid wanted to delay using
it as long as possible - Recall how much less intuitive and obvious the
statement is there was a long tradition of
commentary that ideally Postulate 5 should be a
Proposition with a proof derived from the other 4
Postulates and the Common Notions - The other parts of Proposition 29 are proved
similarly.
49Further properties of parallels
- Proposition 30. If two lines are parallel to the
same line then they are parallel to one another.
- The proof Euclid gives depends on intuitive
properties of parallels that are obvious from a
diagram, but that do not follow directly from the
other Postulates and previously proved theorems.
- In this case, though, the gap can be filled with
additional reasoning see discussion on pages
171 and 172 of BJB if you are interested in
seeing how this works.
50Construction of parallels
- Proposition 31. To construct a line parallel to
a given line and passing through a given point
not on that line. - Construction Say AB is the line and F is the
given point. - Pick any point E on AB and construct EF
(Postulate 1) - Construct FG so that ltGFE ltBEF (Proposition
23) - Proof Then FG and AB, produced indefinitely,
are parallel lines (Proposition 27). - Note in some modern geometry textbooks, the
statement that there is exactly one such parallel
line is used as a substitute for Euclid's
Postulate 5. Not hard to see they are
equivalent statements.
51The angle sum theorem
- Proposition 32. In any triangle, (a) each
exterior angle is equal to the sum of the two
opposite interior angles and (b) the sum of the
interior angles equals 2 right angles. - Construction Given ?ABC, extend AB to D and
construct BE parallel to AC (Proposition 31).
52The angle sum theorem, proof
- Proof (a) The exterior angle ltDBC is equal to
ltDBE ltEBC. But ltDBE ltBAC and ltEBC lt ACB by
Proposition 29 parts (a) and (b). - (b) ltABC ltDBC 2 right angles by Proposition
13. Therefore, using part (a), the sum of the
three angles in the triangle equals 2 right
angles. QED
53Parallelograms
- Proposition 33. If two opposite sides of a
quadrilateral are equal and parallel, then the
other pair of opposite sides are also equal and
parallel. - Let AB and CD be the given parallel sides and
construct CB (Postulate 1)
54Parallelograms
- Proof We have ltBCA ltDCB by Proposition 29
(a). Hence ?ABC and ?DCB are congruent
(Proposition 4 SAS). Therefore BD AC and
ltBCA ltDBC. But then BD and AC are also
parallel by Proposition 27. QED
55More on parallelograms
- Proposition 34. In a parallelogram, the opposite
sides are congruent and the opposite angles are
congruent. Moreover a diagonal divides the
parallelogram into two congruent triangles. - This follows from Propositions 33 and 29.
56Comparing areas
- The next group of propositions establishes facts
about areas of triangles and parallelograms. - Proposition 35. Two parallelograms with the same
base and lying between the same parallel lines
are equal in area.
57Comparing areas
- The next group of propositions establishes facts
about areas of triangles and parallelograms. - Proposition 35. Two parallelograms with the same
base and lying between the same parallel lines
are equal in area.
58Comparing areas
- Proof (another clever one!) Let ABDC and
ABFE be the parallelograms and construct CF.
?ACE and ?BFD are congruent since EC FD, AC
BD and ltACE lt BDF (Proposition 29 and
Proposition 4). Starting with area of ?ACE,
subtract ?GCF and add ?ABG to get the area of
ABFE. But the same subtraction and addition also
gives the area of ABDC(!) QED
59Comment
- This depends on knowing that the entire segment
EF lies on one side of CD. - There are other possible arrangements too!
Euclid does not address this, but it is not too
difficult to adjust the argument to handle the
case where the upper sides of the parallelograms
overlap too (to appear on a future problem set!)
60A corollary
- Proposition 36. Two parallelograms with
congruent bases and lying between the same two
parallel lines are equal in area. - This follows from Proposition 35 and Common
Notion 1 say AB GH. Then areas ABDC ABFE
GHFE.
61Corresponding facts for triangles
- Proposition 37. Two triangles with equal bases
and lying between the same two parallel lines are
equal in area. - ?ABC and ?ABD below have the same area if CD is
parallel to AB
62Corresponding facts for triangles
- Proof comes by constructing parallelograms with
diagonals BC and AD, then applying Propositions
34 and 35.
63Corresponding facts for triangles
- Proposition 38. Two triangles with congruent
bases and lying between the same two parallel
lines are equal in area. - Follows from Proposition 37 by the same
construction used to deduce Proposition 36 from
Proposition 35. - The next two Propositions 39 and 40 are
corollaries of 37 and 38. Not needed for our
purposes, so omitted. - Proposition 41. If a parallelogram and a
triangle have the same base and lie between two
parallel lines, then the parallelogram has double
the area of the triangle. - This follows from the previous statements and
Proposition 34.
64Getting close!
- Propositions 42 through 45 are also not needed
for our purposes. - Proposition 46. To construct a square on a given
line segment. - Construction Let AB be the given line segment.
Erect a perpendicular AC at A (Proposition 11)
and find D on AC with AC AB (Proposition 3 or
just use Postulate 3) - Construct a parallel line to AB passing through D
(Proposition 31) - Construct a parallel line to AB passing through D
(Proposition 31) - Let E be the intersection of the parallels. Then
ABED is a square.
65The goal we have worked toward
- Proposition 47. In a right triangle, the square
on the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the
squares on the two other sides. - The Theorem of Pythagoras, but stated in terms
of areas (not as an algebraic identity!) - The proof Euclid gives has to rank as one of the
masterpieces of all of mathematics, although it
is far from the simplest possible proof (as we
have seen already and will discuss shortly). - The thing that is truly remarkable is the way the
proof uses just what has been developed so far in
Book I of the Elements.
66Euclid's proof, construction
- Let the right triangle be ?ABC with right angle
at A - Construct the squares on the three sides
(Proposition 46) and draw a line through A
parallel to BD (Proposition 31)
67Euclid's proof, step 1
- ltBAG ltBAC 2 right angles, so G,A,C are all
on one line (Proposition 14), and that line is
parallel to FB (Proposition 28) - Consider ?FBG
68Euclid's proof, step 2
- Proposition 37 implies areas of ?FBG and ?FBC
are equal
69Euclid's proof, step 3
- AB FB and BC BD since ABFG and BCED are
squares - ltABD ltFBC since each is a right angle plus ltABC
- Hence ?BFC and ?ABD are congruent (Proposition 4
SAS)
70Euclid's proof, step 4
- Proposition 37 again implies ?BDA and ?BDM have
the same area. - Hence square ABFG and rectangle BLKD have the
same area (twice the corresponding triangles
Proposition 41)
71Euclid's proof, conclusion
- A similar argument on the other side shows
ACKH and CLME have the same area - Therefore BCDE ABFG ACKH. QED