FORMAL DIVISIONS OF A PROPOSITION 371
In particular cases some of these formal divisions may be
absent, but three are always found, the enunciation, proof
and conclusion. Thus in many propositions no construction
is needed, the given figure itself sufficing for the proof;
again, in IV. 10 (to construct an isosceles triangle with each
of the base angles double of the vertical angle) we may, in
a sense, say with Proclus 1 that there is neither setting-out nor
definition, for there is nothing given in the enunciation, and
we set out, not a given straight line, but any straight line AB,
while the proposition does not state (what might be said by
way of definition) that the required triangle is to have AB for
one of its equal sides.
((3) The Siopiargos or statement of conditions of possibility.
«
Sometimes to the statement of a problem there has to be
added a Siopurpos in the more important and familiar sense of
a criterion of the conditions of possibility or, - in its most
complete form, a criterion as to ‘ whether what is sought
is impossible or possible and how far it is practicable and in
how many ways ’. 2 Both kinds of SiopLcrpos begin with the
words <5et Srj, which should be translated, in the case of the
definition, ‘ thus it is required (to prove or do so and so) ’ and,
in the case of the criterion of possibility, ‘ thus it is necessary
that . . (not ‘ but it is necessary . . .’). Cf. I. 22, ‘ Out of
three straight lines which are equal to three given straight
lines to construct a triangle: thus it is necessary that two
of the straight lines taken together in any manner should be
greater than the remaining straight line
(y) Analysis, synthesis, reduction, reductio ad absurdum.
The Elements is a synthetic treatise in that it goes directly
forward the whole way, always proceeding from the known
to the unknown, from the simple and particular to the more
complex and general; hence analysis, which reduces the
unknown or the more complex to the known, has no place
in the exposition, though it would play an important part in
the discovery of the proofs. A full account of the Greek
analysis and synthesis will come more conveniently elsewhere.
1 Proclus on Eucl. I, p. 203. 28 sq.
B b 2
2 lb., p. 202. 3.