382
EUCLID
and proving that they are of maximum or minimum length
when they pass through the centre, and that they diminish or
increase as they diverge more and more from the maximum
or minimum straight lines on either side, while the lengths of
any two which are equally inclined to them, one on each side,
are equal).
Two circles which cut or touch one another are dealt with
in 5, 6 (the two circles cannot have the same centre), 10, 13
(they cannot cut in more points than two, or touch at more
points than one), 11 and the interpolated 12 (when they touch,
the line of centres passes through the point of contact).
14, 15 deal with chords (which are equal if equally distant
from the centre and vice versa, while chords more distant
from the centre are less, and chords less distant greater, and
vice versa).
16-19 are concerned with tangent properties including the
drawing of a tangent (17); it is in 16 that we have the
survival of the ‘angle of a semicircle’, which is proved greater
than any acute rectilineal angle, while the ‘ remaining ’ angle
(the ‘angle’, afterwards called KeparoeiSrjs, or ‘hornlike’,
between,the curve and the tangent at the point of contact)
is less than any rectilineal angle. These ‘ mixed ’ angles,
occurring in 16 and 31, appear no more in serious Greek
geometry, though controversy about their nature went on
in the works of commentators down to Clavius, Peletarius
(Pettier), Vieta, Galilei and Wallis.
We now come to propositions about segments. 20 proves
that the angle at the centre is double of the angle at the
circumference, and 21 that the angles in the same segment are
all equal, which leads to the property of the quadrilateral
in a circle (22). After propositions (23, 24) on ‘ similar
segments ’, it is proved that in equal circles equal arcs subtend
and are subtended by equal angles at the centre or circum
ference, and equal arcs subtend and are subtended by equal
chords (26-9). 30 is the problem of bisecting a given arc,
and 31 proves that the angle in a segment is right, acute or
obtuse according as the segment is a semicircle, greater than
a semicircle or less than a semicircle. 32 proves that the
angle made by a tangent with a chord through the point
of contact is equal to the angle in the alternate segment;