THE ELEMENTS. BOOKS II-III
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generally of the same sort as those of Book I. Definition 1,
stating that equal circles are those which have their diameters
or their radii equal, might alternatively be regarded as a
postulate or a theorem; if stated as a theorem, it could only
be proved by superposition and the congruence-axiom. It is
curious that the Greeks had no single word for radius, which
was with them ‘ the (straight line) from the centre 17 tov
xeurpov. A tangent to a circle is defined (Def. 2) as a straight
line which meets the circle but, if produced, does not cut it;
this is provisional pending the proof in III. 16 that such lines
exist. The definitions (4, 5) of straight lines (in a circle),
i. e. chords, equally distant or more or less distant from the
centre (the test being the length of the perpendicular from
the centre on the chord) might have referred, more generally,
to the distance of any straight line from any point. The
definition (7) of the ‘angle of a segment’ (the ‘mixed’ angle
made by the circumference with the base at either end) is
a survival from earlier text-books (cf. Props. 16, 31). The
definitions of the ‘angle in a segment’ (8) and of ‘similar
segments’ (11) assume (provisionally pending III. 21) that the
angle in a segment is one and the same at whatever point of
the circumference it is formed. A sector (ropevy, explained by
a scholiast as crKVTOTOfUKbs ropevs, a shoemaker’s knife) is
defined (10), but there is nothing about ‘ similar sectors ’ and
no statement that similar segments belong to similar sectors.
Of the propositions of Book III we may distinguish certain
groups. ‘ Central properties account for four propositions,
namely 1 (to find the centre of a circle), 3 (any straight line
through the centre which bisects any chord not passing-
through the centre cuts it at right angles, and vice versa),
4 (two chords not passing through the centre cannot bisect
one another) and 9 (the centre is the only point from which
more than two equal straight lines can be drawn to the
circumference). Besides 3, which shows that any diameter
bisects the whole, series of chords at right angles to it, three
other propositions throw light on the form of the circum
ference of a circle, 2 (showing that it is everywhere concave
towards the centre), 7 and 8 (dealing with the varying lengths
of straight lines drawn from any point, internal or external,
to the concave or convex circumference, as the case may be,