| Eucleides - 1860 - 396 pages
...are equal to one another in area. CONSTRUCTION. — Draw BE and CH. DEMONSTRATION. Syllogism 1. Da (Things which are equal to the same) ARE equal to one another. [Ax. 1.] ii The straight lines BC and EH ARE equal to the same FG. [Hypoth. and I. 34] i Therefore... | |
| 1862 - 722 pages
...upon morsels of paper and rolls them between his fingers, having previously moistened them with his saliva ; and the patient takes the paper pellets with...considerable controversy. In Dudgeon's excellent Lectures on Homopopathy, opinions pro and con. are copiously set forth. Only a few of these require our present... | |
| George Ramsay - Instinct - 1862 - 160 pages
...in the first place, what are called the Axioms of Mathematics or the Science of Quantity, such as " Things which are equal to the same, are equal to one another." " If equals be added to equals, or subtracted from equals, the wholes, or the remainders, will be equal."... | |
| Medicine - 1862 - 792 pages
...insisted on by Mr. Lewes and others : namely, that alcohol replaced a certain amount of food ; and " as things which are equal to the same are equal to one another," he inferred that if a glass of ale was equal to a slice of mutton, in its satisfying effect, and that... | |
| Edward Wilton - Palestine - 1863 - 306 pages
...etymologically, and with the latter, territorially ; and not forgetting the timehonoured axiom of Euclid, that " things which are equal to the same are equal to one another :" the conclusion seems irresistible, that lim and Azem are but component parts of a single proper... | |
| Oxford Architectural & Historical Society - Architecture - 1864 - 808 pages
...assailants should find such difficulty in grasping so palpahle a truism as the first axiom of Euclid, that " things which are equal to the same are equal to one another," or should refuse to apply it to lines and curves and geometrical figures. They even reverse it when... | |
| Evan Lewis - Creation - 1865 - 150 pages
...Euclid are felt to be true in every age, and among every people : "The whole is greater than its part." "Things which are equal to the same, are equal to one another." There may be truths which reason can neither discover nor comprehend; but nothing can be true which... | |
| Charles Knight - Biography - 1866 - 552 pages
...mentions that Apollonius attempted to prove the axioms, and cites his investigation of the theorem, that things which are equal to the same are equal to one another, in which, as may be supposed, propositions are assumed not more obvious than the theorem itself. Vitruvius... | |
| James McCosh - 1866 - 424 pages
...principle in all such cases is either, ' Things are the same which are the same with a third,' or ' things which are equal to the same are equal to one another.' Much confusion is avoided by allotting reasoning of this description to a separate head. As there is... | |
| Religion and science - 1867 - 524 pages
...science. The man who tells me that he cannot believe that " the whole is greater than the part," or " that things which are equal to the same are equal to one another," cannot step over the very threshold of geometry. Nor are these axioms confined to self-evident truths.... | |
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