| Sir Norman Lockyer - Electronic journals - 1903 - 706 pages
...the recent British Association Committee. For the preliminary, junior and senior examinations : — " Any proof of a proposition will be accepted which appears to the examiners to form part of a logical order of treatment of the subject. In the proof of theorems and deductions from them, the use... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - Electronic journals - 1903 - 808 pages
...the recent British Association Committee. For the preliminary, junior and senior examinations : — "Any proof of a proposition will be accepted which appears to the examiners to form part of a logical order of treatment of the subject. In the proof of theorems and deductions from them, the use... | |
| Electronic journals - 1910 - 308 pages
...insistence upon Euclid, and now Euclid's proofs and arrangement are no longer required by the universities. "Any proof of a proposition will be accepted which appears to the examiners to form a part of a logical order of treatment." THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. During the seventeenth century,... | |
| 1903 - 898 pages
...set square or of the protractor is forbidden. Figures should be drawn accurately with a hard pencil. Any proof of a proposition will be accepted which appears to the examine" to form part of a logical order of treatment of the subject. In the proof of theorems and... | |
| Education - 1903 - 692 pages
...theorems, easy deductions from them, and arithmetical illustrations. Any proof of a proposition shall be accepted which appears to the examiners to form part of a ijstematic treatment of the subject ; the order in which the Ibeorems are stated in Schedule B is not... | |
| Education - 1905 - 668 pages
...made to meet this possibility. The Oxford and Cambridge School Board give a note to the effect that " any proof of a proposition will be accepted which...part of a systematic treatment of the subject." The Cambridge Local Examination authorities substitute for systematic treatment " a logical order of treatment";... | |
| Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science. Meeting - Science - 1905 - 786 pages
...order to teachers and students ; any proof of a proposition might, as the Cambridge programme states, be accepted which appears to the examiners to form part of a systematic treatment of the subject. Some have spoken of a preliminary course of geometrical drawing as affording all that is required as... | |
| ANZAAS (Association) - Science - 1905 - 782 pages
...order to teachers and students ; any proof of a proposition might, as the Cambridge programme states, be accepted which appears to the examiners to form part of a systematic treatment of the subject. Some have spoken of a preliminary course of geometrical drawing as affording all that is required as... | |
| Education - 1911 - 946 pages
...insistence upon Euclid, and now Euclid's proofs and arrangement are no longer required by the universities. "Any proof of a proposition will be accepted which appears to the examiners to form a part of a logical order of treatment." THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. During the seventeenth century,... | |
| Great Britain. Board of Education - Teachers - 1905 - 74 pages
...pencil. Questions may be set in which the use of the set square or of the protractor is forbidden. Any proof of a Proposition will be accepted which appears to the Examiner to form part of a logical order of treatment of the subject. In the proof of theorems and... | |
| |