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Ordered geometry is a form of geometry featuring the concept of intermediacy (or "betweenness") but, like projective geometry, omitting the basic notion of measurement. Ordered geometry is a fundamental geometry forming a common framework for affine geometry, absolute geometry, and Euclidean geometry.
[edit] HistoryMoritz Pasch first defined a geometry without reference to measurement in 1882. His axioms were improved upon by Peano (1889), Hilbert (1899), and Veblen (1904) [1]. Euclid anticipated Pasch's approach in definition 4 of The Elements: "a straight line is a line which lies evenly with the points on itself" [2]. [edit] Primitive conceptsThe only primitive notions in ordered geometry are points A, B, C, ... and the relation of intermediacy [ABC] which can be read as "B is between A and C". [edit] DefinitionsThe segment AB is the set of points P such that [APB]. The interval AB is the segment AB and its end points A and B. The ray A/B (read as "the ray from A away from B") is the set of points P such that [PAB]. The line AB is the interval AB and the two rays A/B and B/A. Points on the line AB are said to be collinear. An angle consists of a point O (the vertex) and two non-collinear rays out from O (the sides). A triangle is given by three non-collinear points (called vertices) and their three segments AB, BC, and CA. If three points A, B, and C are non-collinear, then a plane ABC is the set of all points collinear with pairs of points on one or two of the sides of triangle ABC. If four points A, B, C, and D are non-coplanar, then a space (3-space) ABCD is the set of all points collinear with pairs of points selected from any of the four faces (planar regions) of the tetrahedron ABCD. [edit] Axioms of ordered geometry
These axioms are closely related to Hilbert's axioms of order. [edit] Results[edit] Sylvester's problem of collinear pointsThe Sylvester-Gallai theorem can be proven within ordered geometry[3]. [edit] ParallelismGauss, Bolyai, and Lobachevsky developed a notion of parallelism which can be expressed in ordered geometry[4]. Theorem (existence of parallelism): Given a point A and a line r, not through A, there exist exactly two rays from A in the plane Ar which do not meet r. So there is a parallel line through A which does not meet r. Theorem (transmissibility of parallelism): The parallelism of a ray and a line is preserved by adding or subtracting a segment from the beginning of a ray. The symmetry of parallelism cannot be proven in ordered geometry[5]. Therefore, the "ordered" concept of parallelism does not form an equivalence relation on lines. [edit] See also
[edit] References
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