Euclid — "No trace of Euclid's personality has survived."
No trace of Euclid's personality has survived.
No trace of Euclid's personality has survived.
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"In isosceles triangles the angles at the base are equal to one another, and, if the equal straight lines be produced further, the angles under the base will be equal to one another."
"A plane angle is the inclination of the lines to one another, when two lines meet one another, but are not in the same straight line."
"The square on the side subtending the right angle in right-angled triangles is equal to the squares on the sides containing the right angle."
"The properties of figures are derived from their definitions and postulates."
"If equals be added to equals, the wholes are equal."
This is a historical statement *about* Euclid, not *by* him. Included to highlight the paucity of personal quotes.
Date: N/A (historical assessment)
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Despite leaving behind one of history's most influential texts — the Elements — almost nothing is known about Euclid as a human being. No letters, no portraits, no firsthand accounts of his life or character have survived. His dates, his appearance, even whether he worked alone or led a school remain uncertain. The man essentially vanished, leaving only mathematics. His work outlived him completely while he himself disappeared into anonymity.
The observation is deeply ironic — Euclid himself is its subject. His masterwork, the Elements, is famously impersonal: no prefaces about his struggles, no dedications to patrons, no rhetorical voice. He wrote as though mathematics speaks for itself, erasing the author entirely. This extreme intellectual discipline may explain the void. He built a monument so self-contained it needed no author, and history obliged by forgetting the man behind it.
Around 300 BCE, Alexandria was becoming the Mediterranean's intellectual hub under Ptolemy I, who founded the great Library. Scholars gathered there, but biographical documentation was sparse — ancient Greeks recorded ideas, not lives. Most of what survived came through later commentators like Proclus, writing 700 years after Euclid. Without personal correspondence or institutional records, anyone who didn't write autobiographically simply vanished as a person, however towering their intellectual legacy.
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