Advertisement
Advertisement
Desargues's theorem
noun
- the theorem that if two triangles are so related that the lines joining corresponding vertices meet in a point, then the extended corresponding lines of the two triangles meet in three points, all on the same line.
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
Origin of Desargues's theorem1
Example Sentences
It has been proved28 that Desargues’s theorem cannot be deduced from axioms 1-5, that is, if the geometry be confined to two dimensions.
All the proofs proceed by the method of producing a specification of “points†and “straight lines†which satisfies axioms 1-5, and such that Desargues’s theorem does not hold.
But it requires Desargues’s theorem, and hence axiom 6, to prove that Harm.
Also LL', MM', and NN' meet in a point, and therefore in the same point S. Thus KK', LL', and MM' meet in a point, and so, by Desargues's theorem itself, A, B, and D are on a straight line.
Desargues's theorem and the theory of harmonic elements which depends on it have nothing to do with magnitudes at all.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse