Euclid > Related Articles

From Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium

Jump to: navigation, search


This article is developing and not approved.
Main Article
Talk
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
 
A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Euclid.
See also pages that link to Euclid or to this page.

Contents

Parent topics

Subtopics

Other related topics

Bot-suggested topics

Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/Euclid. Needs checking by a human.

  • Adrien-Marie Legendre [r]: (1752 – 1833) important French mathematician whose name lives on in the Legendre polynomials and associated Legendre functions. [e]
  • Albert Einstein [r]: 20th-century physicist who formulated the theories of relativity. [e]
  • Algebra [r]: A branch of mathematics concerning the study of structure, relation and quantity. [e]
  • Ancient Greece [r]: The loose collection of Greek-speaking city-states centered on the Aegean Sea which flourished from the end of the Mycenaean age to the Roman conquest of Greece in 146 BC. [e]
  • Cartesian coordinates [r]: Set of real numbers specifying the position of a point in two- or three-dimensional space with respect to orthogonal axes. [e]
  • Cleveland, Ohio [r]: The second-largest city in the state of Ohio, with a population as of the 2000 Census of 478,403. [e]
  • Element (disambiguation) [r]: Add brief definition or description
  • Euclid's Elements [r]: Mathematical and geometric treatise consisting of 13 books written by the Greek mathematician Euclid in Alexandria circa 300 BC. [e]
  • Euclid's lemma [r]: A prime number that divides a product of two integers must divide one of the two integers. [e]
  • Euclidean algorithm [r]: Algorithm for finding the greatest common divisor of two integers [e]
  • Euclidean geometry [r]: Form of geometry first codified by Euclid in his series of thirteen books, The Elements. [e]
  • Euclidean plane [r]: The plane known from high-school planar geometry. [e]
  • Geometry [r]: The mathematics of spacial concepts. [e]
  • History of scientific method [r]: Development and elaboration of rules for scientific reasoning and investigation. [e]
  • Library [r]: Collection of books and periodicals. [e]
  • Logic [r]: The study of the standards and practices of correct argumentation. [e]
  • Mathematics [r]: The study of quantities, structures, their relations, and changes thereof. [e]
  • Number theory [r]: The study of integers and relations between them. [e]
  • Perfect number [r]: A positive whole number whose proper divisors sum to the number itself. [e]
  • Positivist calendar [r]: Alternative calendar proposed by Auguste Comte in 1849, with each day and month celebrating a different person. [e]
  • Prime number [r]: A number that can be evenly divided by exactly two positive whole numbers, namely one and itself. [e]
  • Pythagoras [r]: Greek mathematician and thinker of the 6th century BCE. [e]
  • Science [r]: The organized body of knowledge about the physical world derived from the activities of observation and experimentation. [e]
  • Unique factorization [r]: Every positive integer can be expressed as a product of prime numbers in essentially only one way. [e]
Views
Personal tools