The History of Mathematics: A Brief Course

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  1. GEOMETRY IN THE MUSLIM WORLD 335


FIGURE 9. Thabit ibn-Qurra's Pythagorean theorem.

4.3. Al-Kuhi. A mathematician who devoted himself almost entirely to geometry

was Abu Sahl al-Kuhi (ca. 940-ca. 1000), the author of many works, of which some

30 survive today. Berggren (1989), who has edited these manuscripts, notes that

14 of them deal with problems inspired by the reading of Euclid, Archimedes,

and Apollonius, while 11 others are devoted to problems involving the compass,

spherical trigonometry, and the theory of the astrolabe. Berggren presents as an

example of al-Kuhi's work the angle trisection shown in Fig. 10. In that figure

the angle ö to be trisected is ABG, with the base BG horizontal. The idea of the

trisection is to extend side AB any convenient distance to D. Then, at the midpoint

of BD, draw a new set of mutually perpendicular lines making an angle with the

horizontal equal to ø/2, and draw the rectangular hyperbola through Β having

those lines as asymptotes. Apollonius had shown (Conies, Book 1, Propositions 29

and 30) that D lies on the other branch of the hyperbola. Then BE is drawn equal

to BD, that is a circle through D with center at Β is drawn, and its intersection

with the hyperbola is labeled E. Finally, EZ is drawn parallel to BG. It then

follows that ø = ÄΑÆΕ = IZBE + ÄÆΕΒ = 30, as required.

4.4. Al-Haytham. One of the most prolific and profound of the Muslim math-

ematician-scientists was Abu Ali ibn al-Haytham (965-1040), known in the West

as Alhazen. He was the author of more than 90 books, 55 of which survive.^14 A

significant indication of his mathematical prowess is that he attempted to recon-

struct the lost Book 8 of Apollonius' Conies. His most famous book is his Treatise

on Optics (Kitab al-Manazir) in seven volumes. The fifth volume contains the

problem known as Alhazen's problem: Given the location of a surface, an object,

and an observer, find the point on the surface at which a light ray from the object

will be reflected to the observer. Rashed (1990) points out that burning-mirror

problems of this sort had been studied extensively by Muslim scholars, especially

by Abu Saad ibn Sahl some decades before al-Haytham. More recently (see Guizal

and Dudley, 2002) Rashed has discovered a manuscript in Teheran written by ibn

Sahl containing precisely the law of refraction known in Europe as Snell's law, after

Willebrod Snell (1591-1626) or Descartes' law.^15 The law of refraction as given by

Ptolemy in the form of a table of values of the angle of refraction and the angle of

incidence implied that the angle of refraction was a quadratic function of the angle

of incidence. The actual relation is that the ratio of the sines of the two angles is

a constant for refraction at the interface between two different media.

(^14) Rashed (1989) suggested that these works and the biographical information about al-Haytham
may actually refer to two different people. The opposite view was maintained by Sabra (1998).
(^15) According to Guizal and Dudley, this law was stated by Thomas Harriot (1560-1621) in 1602.

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