Euclid's Thirteen books of the Elements:
Euclid Discussion Deck

If ye would like to moderate the Euclid Discussion Deck, please drop becket@jollyroger.com a line.
Euclid & Euclid's Thirteen books of the Elements

[Open Source CMS Renaissance][Postnuke Hosting][Gallery Hosting][Blog Hosting]
DR. ELLIOT'S NORTH AMERICAN GREAT BOOKS TOUR--COMING TO A BOOK STORE NEAR YOU
[GREAT BOOKS: DISCUSS THE TRAGEDY OF DRAKERAFT.COM][Great Books Lovers Match]
[Physics Forums][Poetry][Shakespeare's Plays][Great Books][Open Source Business]
[Great Books Games][Federalist Papers][Poetry Contest][Classic eCards][Great Books Forums]

The new Euclid Forum is at killdevilhill.com/philosophyforums.
The World's Largest Literary Cafe: Carolinanavy.com
[Carolinanavy.com][Nantuckets.com][BusinessPhilosophy.com][Classicals.com][Quarterdeck]
[ Jolly Roger Live Chat][The Jolly Roger][KillDevilHill.com][Western Canon University]
[Federalistnavy.com Spirit of America][Starbuck.com Clical Poetry Port]
[ussconstitutions.com] [Free jollyrogermail] [Shakespearean Greetings]
[nantucketnavy.com][hatteraslight.com][Clicgreetings.com]
[SEARCH]


[Follow Ups][Post Followup][ Euclid Forum Frigate] [The Jolly Roger]
[The World's Largest Literary Cafe: Carolinanavy.com]

Posted by stallion on April 26, 19101 at 02:43:05:

I am trying to write a paper and I trying to figure out Euclid's definition of a point. According to Euclid, a point is that which has no part. Does anyone know what this is trying to say?


Follow Ups:



Post a Followup

Name:
E-Mail:

Subject:

Comments:

Optional Link URL:
Link Title:
Optional Image URL:


[Follow Ups][Post Followup][