Morris Kline Quote

The relationship of point to line bothered the Greeks and led Aristotle to separate the two. Though he admits points are on lines, he says that a line is not made up of points and that the continuous cannot be made up of the discrete. This distinction contributed also to the presumed need for separating number from geometry, since to the Greeks numbers were discrete and geometry dealt with continuous magnitudes.


p. 176 - Mathematical Thought from Ancient to Modern Times (1972)


The relationship of point to line bothered the Greeks and led Aristotle to separate the two. Though he admits points are on lines, he says that a...

The relationship of point to line bothered the Greeks and led Aristotle to separate the two. Though he admits points are on lines, he says that a...

The relationship of point to line bothered the Greeks and led Aristotle to separate the two. Though he admits points are on lines, he says that a...

The relationship of point to line bothered the Greeks and led Aristotle to separate the two. Though he admits points are on lines, he says that a...