To the Infinite and Back Again, Part I — A Workbook in Projective Geometry
To the Infinite and Back Again, Part I — A Workbook in Projective Geometry
Henrike Holdrege
Great Barrington, MA: The Evolving Science Association, 2019
(spiral bound workbook, 103 pages)
*For orders of five or more copies for group or classroom use, we offer a wholesale price of $13 per book, plus shipping. Please order directly from us by email or telephone (518) 672-0116.
It is possible to purchase Part I & Part II together at a special price of $35
Also available to purchase as a digital PDF file here
To the Infinite and Back Again, Part I, is an introduction to projective geometry. Projective geometry arose out of the science of perspective after the Renaissance. It is a modern geometry, mainly developed in the 19th century, and transcends classic Euclidean geometry by working with the concepts of point, line, and plane at infinity.
The book is richly illustrated. As a fruit of the author’s many years of teaching adults, it is a workbook for self-study by the lay-person and a resource for high school and college math teachers. The book leads in a careful step-by-step fashion to the challenging idea of the infinite. We learn to think the mind-expanding concepts that open up new ways of understanding. They bring coherence and wholeness to geometric transformations that otherwise would not exist.
The book wants to encourage the reader to actively engage in geometric drawings. In numerous exercises that the book provides we can foster clarity of thought and precision in imagination. We learn to think in transformations, and we can experience the beauty of ideas that grow, weave, and metamorphose.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Form and Forming
The Harmonic Net and the Harmonic Four Points
The Infinitely Distant Point of a Line
The Theorem of Pappus
A Triangle Transformation
Sections of the Point Field
The Projective Versus the Euclidean Point Field
The Theorem of Desargues
The Line at Infinity
Desargues’ Theorem in Three-dimensional Space
Shadows, Projections, and Linear Perspective
Homologies
The Plane at Infinity