absolute geometry

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Etymology === From 1832; introduced by Hungarian mathematician János Bolyai (1802—1860). === Noun === absolute geometry (plural absolute geometries) (geometry) The single (up to logical equivalence) geometry whose axiomatic system is equivalent to that of Euclidean geometry without the parallel postulate or any alternative. 1993 [Princeton University Press], Donald M. Davis, The Nature and Power of Mathematics, 2004, Dover, page 85, Recall that absolute geometry is the set of statements that can be deduced from Euclid's first four postulates. Then existence of parallel lines is certainly a theorem of absolute geometry, while the question being addressed by most of the mathematicians discussed in this section is whether uniqueness of parallels is also a theorem of absolute geometry. (geometry) Any geometry whose axiomatic system extends that of absolute geometry (in the singular sense) and neither assumes nor contradicts the parallel postulate. 1970, J. F. Rigby, Axioms for Absolute Geometry, III, Canadian Journal of Mathematics, Vol. XXII, No. 1, Canadian Mathematical Congress, University of Toronto Press, page 185, A discussion of one-dimensional absolute geometries, with examples, will be given in a separate paper. ==== Synonyms ==== (Euclidean geometry without the parallel postulate): neutral geometry ==== Translations ==== === See also === parallel postulate triangle postulate === Further reading === Foundations of geometry on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Euclidean geometry on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Non-Euclidean geometry on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Hyperbolic geometry on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Hilbert's axioms on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Parallel postulate on Wikipedia.Wikipedia