Then, too, there have of late come guides who have shown much ingenuity by digging tunnels into some of the greatest mountains. These they have paved with smooth concrete, and have arranged for rubber-tired cars that run without jar to the heart of some mountain. Arrived there the pilgrim has a glance, as the car swiftly turns in a blaze of electric light, at a roughly painted panorama of the view from the summit, and he is assured by the guide that he has accomplished all that he would have done, had he laboriously climbed the peak itself.
In the midst of all the advocacy of sand-dune climbing, and of rubber-tired cars to see a painted view, the great body of guides still climb their mountains with their little groups of followers, and the vigor of the ascent and the magnificence of the view still attract all who are strong and earnest, during their sojourn in the Valley of Youth. Among the mountains that have for ages attracted the pilgrims is Mons Latinus, usually called in the valley by the more pleasing name Latina. Mathematica, and Rhetorica, and Grammatica are also among the best known. A group known as Montes Naturales comprises Physica, Biologica, and Chemica, and one great peak with minor peaks about it is called by the people Philosophia. There are those who claim that these great masses of rock are too old to be climbed, as if that affected the view; while others claim that the ascent is too difficult and that all who do not favor the sand dunes are reactionary. But this affects only a few who belong to the real mountains, and the others labor diligently to improve the paths and to lessen unnecessary toil, but they seek not to tear off the summits nor do they attend to the amusing attempts of those who sit by the hillocks and throw pebbles at the rocky sides of the mountains upon which they work.
Geometry is a mountain. Vigor is needed for its ascent. The views all along the paths are magnificent. The effort of climbing is stimulating. A guide who points out the beauties, the grandeur, and the special places of interest commands the admiration of his group of pilgrims. One who fails to do this, who does not know the paths, who puts unnecessary burdens upon the pilgrim, or who blindfolds him in his progress, is unworthy of his position. The pretended guide who says that the painted panorama, seen from the rubber-tired car, is as good as the view from the summit is simply a fakir and is generally recognized as such. The mountain will stand; it will not be used as a mere commercial quarry for building stone; it will not be affected by pellets thrown from the little hillocks about; but its paths will be freed from unnecessary flints, they will be straightened where this can advantageously be done, and new paths on entirely novel plans will be made as time goes on, but these paths will be hewed out of rock, not made out of the dreams of a day. Every worthy guide will assist in all these efforts at betterment, and will urge the pilgrim at least to ascend a little way because of the fact that the same view cannot be obtained from other peaks; but he will not take seriously the efforts of the fakir, nor will he listen with more than passing interest to him who proclaims the sand heap to be a Matterhorn.
INDEX
- Ahmes, [27], [254], [278], [306]
- Alexandroff, [164]
- Algebra, [37], [84]
- Al-Khowarazmi, [37]
- Allman, G. J., [29]
- Almagest, [35]
- Al-Nairīzī, [171], [193], [214], [264]
- Al-Qifṫī, [49]
- Analysis, [41], [161]
- Angle, [142], [155];
- trisection of, [31], [215]
- Anthonisz, Adriaen, [279]
- Antiphon, [31], [32], [276]
- Apollodotus (Apollodorus), [259]
- Apollonius, [34], [214], [231]
- Applied problems, [75], [103], [178], [186], [192], [195], [203], [204], [209], [215], [217], [242], [267], [295], [317]
- Appreciation of geometry, [19]
- Arab geometry, [37], [51]
- Archimedes, [34], [42], [48], [139], [141], [215], [276], [278], [314], [327], [328]
- Aristæus, [310]
- Aristotle, [33], [42], [134], [135], [137], [145], [154], [177], [209]
- Aryabhatta, [36], [279]
- Associations, syllabi of, [58], [60], [64]
- Assumptions, [116]
- Astrolabe, [172]
- Athelhard of Bath, [37], [51]
- Athenæus, [259]
- Axioms, [31], [41], [116]
- Babylon, [26], [272]
- Bartoli, [10], [44], [238]
- Belli, [10], [44], [172]
- Beltinus, [239], [241]
- Beltrami, [127]
- Bennett, J., [224]
- Bernoulli, [280]
- Bertrand, [62]
- Betz, [131]
- Bezout, [62]
- Bhaskara, [232], [268]
- Billings, R. W., [222]
- Billingsley, [52]
- Bion, [192], [239]
- Boethius, [43], [50]
- Bolyai, [128]
- Bonola, [128]
- Books of geometry, [165], [167], [201], [227], [252], [269], [289], [303], [321]
- Bordas-Demoulin, [24]
- Borel, [11], [67], [196]
- Bosanquet, [272]
- Bossut, [23]
- Bourdon, [62]
- Bourlet, [67], [165], [196]
- Brahmagupta, [36], [268], [279]
- Bretschneider, C. A., [30]
- Brouncker, [280]
- Bruce, W. N., [199]
- Bryson, [31], [32], [276]
- Cajori, [46]
- Calandri, [30]
- Campanus, [37], [51], [135]
- Cantor, M., [29], [46]
- Capella, [50], [135]
- Capra, [44]
- Carson, G. W. L., [18], [96], [114]
- Casey, J., [38]
- Cassiodorius, [50]
- Cataneo, [10], [44]
- Cavalieri, [136], [329]
- Chinese values of π, [279]
- Church schools, [43]
- Cicero, [34], [50], [259], [314]
- Circle, [145], [201], [270], [287];
- squaring the, [31], [32], [277]
- Circumference, [145]
- Cissoid, [34]
- Class in geometry, [108]
- Clavius, [121]
- Colleges, geometry in the, [46]
- Collet, [24]
- Commensurable magnitudes, [206], [207]
- Conchoid, [34]
- Condorcet, [23]
- Cone, [315]
- Congruent, [151]
- Conic sections, [33], [315]
- Continuity, [212]
- Converse proposition, [175], [190], [191]
- Crelle, [142]
- Cube, duplicating the, [32], [307]
- Cylinder, [313]
- D'Alembert, [24], [67]
- Dase, [279]
- Decagon, [273]
- Definitions, [41], [132]
- De Judaeis, [239], [241]
- De Morgan, A., [58]
- De Paolis, [67]
- Descartes, [38], [84], [320]
- Diameter, [146]
- Dihedral, [298]
- Diocles, [34]
- Diogenes Laertius, [259]
- Diorismus, [41]
- Direction, [150]
- Distance, [154]
- Doyle, Conan, [8]
- Drawing, [95], [221], [281]
- Duality, [173]
- Duhamel, [164]
- Dupin, [11], [217]
- Duplication problem, [32], [307]
- Dürer, [10]