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Single Idea 18217

[filed under theme 6. Mathematics / B. Foundations for Mathematics / 3. Axioms for Geometry ]

Full Idea

Hilbert's formulation of the Euclidean theory is of special interest because (besides being rigorously axiomatised) it does not employ the real numbers in the axioms.

Gist of Idea

Hilbert's geometry is interesting because it captures Euclid without using real numbers

Source

report of David Hilbert (Foundations of Geometry [1899]) by Hartry Field - Science without Numbers 3

Book Ref

Field,Hartry: 'Science without Number' [Blackwell 1980], p.25


A Reaction

Notice that this job was done by Hilbert, and not by the fictionalist Hartry Field.


The 21 ideas with the same theme [formal starting points for deriving geometry]:

Euclid relied on obvious properties in diagrams, as well as on his axioms [Potter on Euclid]
Euclid's parallel postulate defines unique non-intersecting parallel lines [Euclid, by Friend]
Euclid needs a principle of continuity, saying some lines must intersect [Shapiro on Euclid]
Euclid says we can 'join' two points, but Hilbert says the straight line 'exists' [Euclid, by Bernays]
Modern geometries only accept various parts of the Euclid propositions [Russell on Euclid]
Archimedes defined a straight line as the shortest distance between two points [Archimedes, by Leibniz]
We shouldn't just accept Euclid's axioms, but try to demonstrate them [Leibniz]
Euclid's could be the only viable geometry, if rejection of the parallel line postulate doesn't lead to a contradiction [Benardete,JA on Kant]
The whole of Euclidean geometry derives from a basic equation and transformations [Hilbert]
Euclid axioms concerns possibilities of construction, but Hilbert's assert the existence of objects [Hilbert, by Chihara]
Hilbert's formalisation revealed implicit congruence axioms in Euclid [Hilbert, by Horsten/Pettigrew]
Hilbert's geometry is interesting because it captures Euclid without using real numbers [Hilbert, by Field,H]
Geometry is united by the intuitive axioms of projective geometry [Russell, by Musgrave]
Tarski improved Hilbert's geometry axioms, and without set-theory [Tarski, by Feferman/Feferman]
There are four different possible conventional accounts of geometry [Quine]
Modern axioms of geometry do not need the real numbers [Bostock]
'Metric' axioms uses functions, points and numbers; 'synthetic' axioms give facts about space [Field,H]
Euclid has a unique parallel, spherical geometry has none, and saddle geometry has several [Hart,WD]
Analytic geometry gave space a mathematical structure, which could then have axioms [Chihara]
The culmination of Euclidean geometry was axioms that made all models isomorphic [McGee]
In non-Euclidean geometry, all Euclidean theorems are valid that avoid the fifth postulate [Walicki]