Definition:Porism
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Definition
The porism is a term whose precise definition is difficult to pin down.
It arises from the works of Euclid, and appears to have two different meanings:
- $(1): \quad$ A result which follows directly, or in passing, during the course of proving something else; that is, a corollary.
- $(2): \quad$ A proposition that asserts that there may be conditions under which a particular problem has either no solutions or an indeterminate number of them.
Linguistic Note
The word porism derives ultimately from the Greek $\pi \omicron \rho \omicron \varsigma$ (poros) meaning a thing brought, or a thing deduced.
Sources
- 1926: Sir Thomas L. Heath: Euclid: The Thirteen Books of The Elements: Volume 1 (2nd ed.) ... (previous) ... (next): Introduction: Chapter $\text{II}$. Euclid"s Other Works
- 1989: Ephraim J. Borowski and Jonathan M. Borwein: Dictionary of Mathematics ... (previous) ... (next): porism