Hilbert's axioms
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David Hilbert's axioms are a set of 20 assumptions (originally 21) designed to form the foundation for a modern treatment of Euclidean geometry. The axioms were originally published in Grundlagen der Geometrie (Foundations of Geometry) in 1899.
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Postulates
I. Axioms of incidence
Postulate I.1
For any two points A, B, there exists a line a that contains each of the points A, B
Postulate I.2
For any two points A, B there exists no more than one line containing both A and B
Postulate I.3
There exists at least two points on any given line. There exists at least three points that do not lie on a given line.
Postulate I.4
For a set of three points {A, B, C} that do not lie on the same line, there exists a plane α that contains each of the points in the set. For every plane there exists at least one point which it contains.
Postulate I.5
For a set of three points {A, B, C} that do not all lie on the same line, there exists only one plane that contains each of the points in the set.
Postulate I.6
If two points {A, B} of a line, a, lie in a plane, α, then every point in a lies in α
Postulate I.7
If two planes {α, β} have a point A in common, then they have at least one other point, B, in common
Postulate 1.8
There exist at least four points which do not lie in a plane
II. Axioms of order
Postulate II.1
If a point B lies between points A and C, then the points {A, B, C} are three distinct points on the same line and B lies between C and A
Postulate II.2
Given two points {A, C}, a point B exists on the line AC such that C lies between A and B
Postulate II.3
Given any three points {A, B, C} of a line, one and only one of the points is between the other two
Postulate II.4
Given three points {A, B, C} that do not lie on a line and given a line, a, that lies in the plane ABC but does not contain any of the points A, B, C: if the line a passes through a point of the segment AB, then it also passes through a point in the segment AC or through a point in the segment BC
III. Axioms of congruence
Postulate III.1
Given two points {A, B<i>} on a line <i>a and given a point A' on a or another line a', there exists a point B' on a side of the line a' such that AB<math>\cong<math>A'B' are congruent
Postulate III.2
Given segments A'B' and A"B" such that both are congruent to the same segment AB, then A'B' <math>\cong<math>A"B"
Postulate III.3
Given a line a with segments AB and BC such that the point B is the only intersection of the two points and on the same line or a line a' with segments A'B'<i> and <i>B'C' such that the point B' is the only intersection: if AB<math>\cong<math>A'B' and BC<math>\cong<math>B'C' then AC<math>\cong<math>A'C'
Postulate III.4
If <math>\angle<math>ABC is an angle and B'C' is a ray, then there is one and only one ray B'A' on each side of the line B'C'<i> such that <math>\angle<math><i>A'B'C'<math>\cong<math><math>\angle<math>ABC
Corollary: Every angle is congruent to itself
Postulate III.5
Given two triangles ABC and A'B'C' with congruences such that AB<math>\cong<math>A'B', AC<math>\cong<math><i>A'C' and <math>\angle<math>BAC<math>\cong<math><math>\angle<math><i>B'A'C' then <math>\angle<math>ABC<math>\cong<math><math>\angle<math>A'B'C'.
IV. Axiom of parallels
Postulate IV.1
Given a line a and a point A not on a, there is at most one line in the plane that contains a and A that passes through A and does not intersect </i>a</i>
V. Axioms of continuity
Postulate V.1 (Archimedes axiom)
Given segments AB and CD, there exists a number n such that n copies of CD constructed contiguously from A along the ray AB will pass beyond the point B
Postulate V.2 (line completeness)
There exists no extension of a set of points on a line with order and congruence relations that would preserve the relations existing among the original elements as well as preserving line order and congruence, i.e., Axioms I-III and V.1.
References
- Hilbert, D. The Foundations of Geometry, 2nd ed. Chicago, IL: Open Court, 1980
External links
- Math Department at the UMBC (http://www.math.umbc.edu/~campbell/Math306Spr02/Axioms/Hilbert.html)
- Mathworld (http://mathworld.wolfram.com/HilbertsAxioms.html)fr:Axiomes de Hilbert de la géométrie euclidienne