Geometry Deserves An Entry
Mathematics :: Math Topics :: Geometry
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Geometry Deserves An Entry
Ari Lox
by Robert Hamill
by Robert Hamill
Arithophilus Loxodrome sat comfortably in the window seat of an intercontinental jet. Flying at 31,143 feet (9492 meters) above the southernmost tip of the five freshwater lakes that were formed by the retreating glaciers of the Pleistocene Epoch, Ari wondered to what distance his natural ocular mechanism could allow him to observe the horizon? And just what portion of this vast hydrated sphere, the third planet of a G type star, was available for his sensory contemplation?
A small cup full of coca, caffeine, caramel, sugar, and carbonic acid fizzed over a cube of frozen dihydrogen oxide while Ari pondered.
Owning a sharp pencil and a thick pad of yellow paper, Ari sipped his liquid resuscitative and attacked the problem in a manner befitting his high school geometry training, where the text was expurgated Euclid two thousand years old. Well, maybe not his particular copy of the text.
Re: Geometry Deserves An Entry
Your right. Plato founded The Academy I think around 400BC. Over the doorway, there was a sign that read “Let no one unversed in geometry enter here.” He tied geometry to his ideas of religion and understanding of the world.
Wile E. Coyote ... Super Genius






