Difference between revisions of "A New Definition of Parallelism"

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==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
  
The fifth postulate of Euclid, the parallel postulate, was formulated in 300 B C, and is still not proved as a theorem although many have tried to do that. The reason for this is NOT to be found in tha postulate per se but in the definition of paralletism. The most common definition states that PARALLEL LINES NEVER MEET. It will be demonstrated here that why this definition is WRONG and why parallelism is hard to define.[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
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The fifth postulate of Euclid, the parallel postulate, was formulated in 300 B C, and is still not proved as a theorem although many have tried to do that. The reason for this is NOT to be found in tha postulate per se but in the definition of paralletism. The most common definition states that PARALLEL LINES NEVER MEET. It will be demonstrated here that why this definition is WRONG and why parallelism is hard to define.
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[[Category:Scientific Paper|new definition parallelism]]

Latest revision as of 09:58, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title A New Definition of Parallelism
Read in full Link to paper
Author(s) John-Erik Persson
Keywords {{{keywords}}}
Published 2007
Journal Proceedings of the NPA
Volume 4
Number 2
No. of pages 2
Pages 202

Read the full paper here

Abstract

The fifth postulate of Euclid, the parallel postulate, was formulated in 300 B C, and is still not proved as a theorem although many have tried to do that. The reason for this is NOT to be found in tha postulate per se but in the definition of paralletism. The most common definition states that PARALLEL LINES NEVER MEET. It will be demonstrated here that why this definition is WRONG and why parallelism is hard to define.