Euclid's "Elements" was and is "the" text book for teaching geometry, math, conic sections, et al....It's thousands of years old but still relevant, That is genius.
I love Pythagoras but seriously, he was a dude, Euclid was a genius.
Euclid's "Elements" was and is "the" text book for teaching geometry, math, conic sections, et al....It's thousands of years old but still relevant, That is genius.
I love Pythagoras but seriously, he was a dude, Euclid was a genius.
Haha. I remember writing a booklet in junior high geometry which I thought was a terribly daring thing to do: in about 8 folded pages I explored some of the implications of "non-Euclidean" geometry. I don't think I would have called it "non-Pythagorean" geometry. Maybe if I were writing about scale lengths. I don't know that Mr E discussed electric guitars.
Haha. I remember writing a booklet in junior high geometry which I thought was a terribly daring thing to do: in about 8 folded pages I explored some of the implications of "non-Euclidean" geometry. I don't think I would have called it "non-Pythagorean" geometry. Maybe if I were writing about scale lengths. I don't know that Mr E discussed electric guitars.