Euclid (c. 300 BC)
Euclid was one of the first great Greek mathematicians. In his classic "Elements,"
Euclid laid the framework for our formal understanding of geometry.
While earlier Greek philosophers like the Pythagoreans investigated a number of
mathematical problems, Euclid introduced the idea of rigorous proof: Starting with a
handful of assumed axioms about the basic nature of points, lines, circles, and angles,
Euclid builds up ever more complicated ideas in geometry by using pure deductive
logic to combine insights from previous results to understand new ideas.
This process of using rigorous proof to build new results out of existing results
introduced in the "Elements" has remained perhaps the most central guiding principle
of mathematics for over two millennia.
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