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ELEMENTS

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The Gift of Dr. Thoncas of Proserish vor in the County

EOMETRY. of Carrarthin To Profecca College May 1554

PRINCIPAL PROPOSITIONS

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PRINTED FOR J. JOHNSON, NO. 72, ST. PAUL'S
CHURCH-YARD,

BY BYE AND LAW, ST. JOHN'S-SQUARE, CLERKENWELL.

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PREFACE.

Of all the works of antiquity which have been tranfmitted to the prefent times, none are more univerfally and defervedly esteemed than the Elements of Geometry which go' under the name of EUCLID. In many other branches of fcience the moderns have far furpaffed their mafters; but, after a lapfe of more than two thoufand years, this performance still maintains its original preeminence, and has even acquired additional celebrity from the fruitless attempts which have been made to eftablifh a different fyftem.

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It is, however, generally allowed, that the Elements, as they now ftand, are attended with many difficulties, which greatly retard the progrefs of learners, on their firft entrance upon this ftudy, and prevent them from applying to other branches of knowledge, which, in the present advanced state of the fciences, are equally useful and important. Among other obftacles of this kind A 2

may

may be mentioned the theory of parallel lines, the doctrine of proportion, and many things in the eleventh and twelfth books, relating to folids, which are ufually found extremely embarraffing; and notwithstanding the numberlefs efforts which have been made to elucidate and explain them, are still liable to many objections,

On this account, it has been found neceffary, in most of our academical inftitutions, to have recourfe to fome of the more compendious rudiments of later writers, who, by means of a different arrangement, have endeavoured to new-model the fubject, and to render it lefs complex and elaborate, But the greater part of them are fo ill digefted that they serve rather to mislead the learner than to afford him any affiftance. For, befides being deficient in order and method, fome of thefe authors have treated the fubjet algebraically and others, by intro ducing a number of exceptionable principles, and a vague unfatisfactory mode of demonftration, have degraded the fcience, and deprived it of fome of its most striking advantagesiuiw pigol Jnelleons

It is, therefore, the defign of the following performance, to obviate these objections, and to render the fubject more familiar and per fpicuous, without weakening its evidence, or deftroying its elegance and fimplicity. For this purpose, many propofitions in EUCLID, which are of little or no ufe in their application, and were only introduced into the Elements as neceffary links in the chain of reafoning, are here omitted; and others fubftituted in their place, which are equally conducive to that end, and at the fame time more useful and concife. By this means all the most effential principles of the fcience have been brought into a fhorter compafs, and the demonftrations, which lead to its fublimer truths, fo continued, as to render their connection as obvious and comprehens five as poffible,

Great care has also been taken to preferve that methodical precifion and rigour of proof, which, in treating of this fubject, are requi fites of nearly equal importance with the fciences itfelf. For independently of its other advantages, Geometry has always been con fidered as an excellent logic, which in form

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