Pasch's theorem

Not to be confused with Pasch's axiom regarding a line through a triangle

In geometry, Pasch's theorem, stated in 1882 by the German mathematician Moritz Pasch,[1] is a result in plane geometry which cannot be derived from Euclid's postulates.

The statement is as follows. Given points a, b, c, and d on a line, if it is known that the points are ordered as (a, b, c) and (b, c, d), then it is also true that (a, b, d).[2] [Here, for example, (a, b, c) means that point b lies between points a and c.]

See also

Notes

  1. Vorlesungen über neuere Geometrie (Leipzig, 1882)
  2. Coxeter (1969, p. 179) states the result in 12.274 but does not refer to it specifically as Pasch's theorem.

References

External links


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