Geometric Dissections and Transpositions

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Geometric Dissections and Transpositions (1891)
by Henry Perigal
886015Geometric Dissections and Transpositions1891Henry Perigal

On Geometric Dissections and Transformations[edit]

Extracted from The Messenger of Mathematics, New Series, No. 19, 1872.

«The present series of papers consist chiefly of notes and diagrams extracted from my note-books and sketches made during the last forty years. I have devoted much time and thought to the solution of geometric theorems and problems by dissections and transpositions: viz. in proving the equality of areas in equivalent rectangles, &c., and investigating how the figures could be best dissected, so that their component parts might be fitted together in either form; and I have often contemplated proving all the suitable Theorems and Problems in Euclid by such dissections and transpositions: so as to render them self-evident by ocular demonstration. I worked on paper ruled all over in small squares, which I found useful in facilitating dissections; and I have alway had a fancy that the ancient Egyptians and early Greck geometers adopted some such expedient in their geometrical researches. So that I deem it probable that the property of the right-angled triangle may have been discovered by similar means; and the solution I hit upon forty years ago was perhaps the very one discovered forty centuries ago, and re-discovered by Pythagoras nearly twenty centuries afterwards; and not unlikely, as was also the case with me, in the endeavour to find geometrically a square demonstrably equal in area to a circle by dissection and transposition.»


Geometric Dissections and Transpositions[edit]