Euclid And His Modern Rivals

Euclid and his Modern Rivals is a mathematical work by Lewis Carroll, issued in 1879 under his real name of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. It considers the theoretical work of a series of contemporary mathematicians, demonstrating how each in turn is either inferior to or functionally identical to that of Euclid. This work is evidence of the relative conservatism of Dodgson, and his unwillingness to accept the theories, proliferating at the time, of non-euclidean geometry. Despite its scholarly subject and content, the work takes the form of a whimsical dialogue, principally between a mathematician named Minos and a "devil's advocate" named Professor Niemand (German for 'nobody') who represents the "Modern Rivals" of the title.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
carfree movement
don maclaughlin
rybinsky district
metamorpho
severny district
shalinsky district
iqbal park
katana (comics)
solar system model
lincoln park (park)
trent fm
jonathan bowers
d. g. anderson
lillian martin
whirlpool galaxy
stargate (video game)
ira coleman batman
alex escobar
juan daz de sols
smolensky district
lincoln's inn fields
edgardo alfonzo
sokolsky district
tuberoinfundibular pathway
visby (disambiguation)
sosnovsky district
sovetsky district
st. andrew's cathedral
samuel ben judah ibn tibbon
marine drive
henry blanco
cathedral church of saint andrew
spassky district
variable argument macro
sunzhensky district
tambovsky district
alan gordon cunningham
roger cedeo
tersky district
troitsky district
ibn tibbon
tselinny district
simn bolvar international airport
irish examiner