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(2012) Synthese 186 (1).

The twofold role of diagrams in Euclid's plane geometry

Marco Panza

pp. 55-102

Proposition I.1 is, by far, the most popular example used to justify the thesis that many of Euclid’s geometric arguments are diagram-based. Many scholars have recently articulated this thesis in different ways and argued for it. My purpose is to reformulate it in a quite general way, by describing what I take to be the twofold role that diagrams play in Euclid’s plane geometry (EPG). Euclid’s arguments are object-dependent. They are about geometric objects. Hence, they cannot be diagram-based unless diagrams are supposed to have an appropriate relation with these objects. I take this relation to be a quite peculiar sort of representation. Its peculiarity depends on the two following claims that I shall argue for: (i) The identity conditions of EPG objects are provided by the identity conditions of the diagrams that represent them; (ii) EPG objects inherit some properties and relations from these diagrams.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-012-0074-2

Full citation:

Panza, M. (2012). The twofold role of diagrams in Euclid's plane geometry. Synthese 186 (1), pp. 55-102.

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