David Hilbert (
January 23,
1862,
Königsberg,
Province of Prussia –
February 14,
1943,
Göttingen,
Germany) was a
German mathematician, recognized as one of the most influential and universal mathematicians of the 19th and early 20th centuries. He invented or developed a broad range of fundamental ideas, in
invariant theory, the
axiomatization of geometry, and with the notion of
Hilbert space,
[1] one of the foundations of
functional analysis.
He adopted and warmly defended
Cantor's set theory and
transfinite numbers. A famous example of his leadership in
mathematics is his 1900 presentation of a
collection of problems that set the course for much of the mathematical research of the 20th century.
Hilbert and his students supplied significant portions of the mathematical infrastructure required for
quantum mechanics and
general relativity. He is also known as one of the founders of
proof theory,
mathematical logic and the distinction between mathematics and
metamathematics.
Life
David Hilbert, the first of two children and only son of Otto and Maria Therese (Erdtmann) Hilbert, was born in
Wehlau near
Königsberg — Königsberg was that time the capital of
East Prussia (now
Kaliningrad,
Russia).
[2] In the fall of 1872 he entered the Friedrichskolleg
Gymnasium (the same school that
Immanuel Kant had attended 140 years before), but after an unhappy duration he transferred (fall 1879) to and graduated from (spring 1880) the more science-oriented Wilhelm Gymnasium.
[3] Upon graduation he enrolled (autumn 1880) at the
University of Königsberg . In the spring of 1882
Hermann Minkowski (two years younger than Hilbert and also a native of Königsberg but so talented he had graduated early from his gymnasium and gone to Berlin for three semesters),
[4] returned to Königsberg and entered the university. "Hilbert knew his luck when he saw it. In spite of his father's disapproval, he soon became friends with the shy, gifted Minkowski."
[5] In 1884
Adolf Hurwitz arrived from Göttingen as an Extraordinarius, i.e., an associate professor. An intense and fruitful scientific exchange between the three began and especially Minkowski and Hilbert would exercise a reciprocal influence over each other at various times in their scientific careers. Hilbert obtained his doctorate in 1885, with a dissertation, written under
Ferdinand von Lindemann, titled
Über invariante Eigenschaften spezieller binärer Formen, insbesondere der Kugelfunktionen ("On the invariant properties of special
binary forms, in particular the spherical harmonic functions").
Hilbert remained at the University of Königsberg as a professor from 1886 to 1895. In 1892, Hilbert married Käthe Jerosch (1864–1945), "the daughter of a Konigsberg merchant, an outspoken young lady with an independence of mind that matched his own".
[6] While at Königsberg they had their one child Franz Hilbert (1893–1969). In 1895, as a result of intervention on his behalf by
Felix Klein he obtained the position of Chairman of Mathematics at the
University of Göttingen, at that time the best research center for mathematics in the world and where he remained for the rest of his life.
Son Franz would suffer his entire life from an (undiagnosed) mental illness, his inferior intellect a terrible disappointment to his father and this tragedy a matter of distress to the mathematicians and students at Göttingen.
[7] Sadly, Minkowski — Hilbert's "best and truest friend"
[8] — would die prematurely of a ruptured appendix in 1909.
The Göttingen school
Among the students of Hilbert, there were
Hermann Weyl, the champion of chess
Emanuel Lasker,
Ernst Zermelo, and
Carl Gustav Hempel.
John von Neumann was his assistant. At the University of Göttingen, Hilbert was surrounded by a social circle of some of the most important mathematicians of the 20th century, such as
Emmy Noether and
Alonzo Church.
Among his 69 Ph.D. students in Göttingen were many who later became famous mathematicians, including (with date of thesis):
Otto Blumenthal (1898),
Felix Bernstein (1901),
Hermann Weyl (1908),
Richard Courant (1910),
Erich Hecke (1910),
Hugo Steinhaus (1911),
Wilhelm Ackermann (1925).
[9] Between 1902 and 1939 Hilbert was editor of the
Mathematische Annalen, the leading mathematical journal of the time.
Later years
Hilbert lived to see the
Nazis purge many of the prominent faculty members at
University of Göttingen, in 1933.
[10] Among those forced out were
Hermann Weyl, who had taken Hilbert's chair when he retired in 1930,
Emmy Noether and
Edmund Landau. One of those who had to leave Germany was
Paul Bernays, Hilbert's collaborator in
mathematical logic, and co-author with him of the important book
Grundlagen der Mathematik (which eventually appeared in two volumes, in 1934 and 1939). This was a sequel to the Hilbert–
Ackermann book
Principles of Theoretical Logic from 1928.
About a year later, he attended a banquet, and was seated next to the new Minister of Education,
Bernhard Rust. Rust asked, "How is mathematics in Göttingen now that it has been freed of the Jewish influence?" Hilbert replied, "Mathematics in Göttingen? There is really none any more."
[11]
By the time Hilbert died in 1943, the Nazis had nearly completely restructured the university, many of the former faculty being either Jewish or married to Jews. Hilbert's funeral was attended by fewer than a dozen people, only two of whom were fellow academics.
[12]
On his tombstone, at Göttingen, one can read his epitaph:
[13]
- Wir müssen wissen.
- Wir werden wissen.
- : We must know.
- : We will know.
Or better:
We have to know.
We shall know!
The finiteness theorem
Hilbert's first work on invariant functions led him to the demonstration in 1888 of his famous
finiteness theorem. Twenty years earlier,
Paul Gordan had demonstrated the
theorem of the finiteness of generators for binary forms using a complex computational approach. The attempts to generalize his method to functions with more than two variables failed because of the enormous difficulty of the calculations involved. Hilbert realized that it was necessary to take a completely different path. As a result, he demonstrated
Hilbert's basis theorem: showing the existence of a finite set of generators, for the invariants of
quantics in any number of variables, but in an abstract form. That is, while demonstrating the existence of such a set, it was not a
constructive proof — it did not display "an object" — but rather, it was an
existence proof[14] and relied on use of the
Law of Excluded Middle in an infinite extension.
Hilbert sent his results to the
Mathematische Annalen. Gordan, the house expert on the theory of invariants for the
Mathematische Annalen, was not able to appreciate the revolutionary nature of Hilbert's theorem and rejected the article, criticizing the exposition because it was insufficiently comprehensive. His comment was:
- Das ist nicht Mathematik. Das ist Theologie.
- :This is not Mathematics. This is Theology.[15]
Klein, on the other hand, recognized the importance of the work, and guaranteed that it would be published without any alterations. Encouraged by Klein and by the comments of Gordan, Hilbert in a second article extended his method, providing estimations on the maximum degree of the minimum set of generators, and he sent it once more to the
Annalen. After having read the manuscript, Klein wrote to him, saying:
- Without doubt this is the most important work on general algebra that the Annalen has ever published.
Later, after the usefulness of Hilbert's method was universally recognized, Gordan himself would say:
- I have convinced myself that even theology has its merits.[16]
For all his successes, the nature of his proof stirred up more trouble than Hilbert could imagine at the time. Although Kronecker had conceded, Hilbert would later respond to others' similar crictisms that "many different constructions are subsumed under one fundamental idea" — in other words (to quote Reid): "Through a proof of existence, Hilbert had been able to obtain a construction"; "the proof" (i.e. the symbols on the page)
was "the object".
[17] Not all were convinced. While
Kronecker would die soon after, his
constructivist banner would be carried forward in full cry by the young
Brouwer and his developing
intuitionist "school", much to Hilbert's torment in his later years.
[18] Indeed Hilbert would loose his "gifted pupil"
Weyl to intuitionism — "Hilbert was disturbed by his former student's fascination with the ideas of Brouwer, which aroused in Hilbert the memory of Kronecker".
[19] Brouwer the intuitionist in particular raged against the use of the Law of Excluded Middle over infinite sets (as Hilbert had used it). Hilbert would respond:
- :" 'Taking the Principle of the Excluded Middle from the mathematician ... is the same as ... prohibiting the boxer the use of his fists.'
- "The possible loss did not seem to bother Weyl."[20]
Axiomatization of geometry
The text
Grundlagen der Geometrie (tr.:
Foundations of Geometry) published by Hilbert in 1899 proposes a formal set, the
Hilbert's axioms, substituting the traditional
axioms of Euclid. They avoid weaknesses identified in those of
Euclid, whose works at the time were still used textbook-fashion. Independently and contemporaneously, a 19-year-old American student named
Robert Lee Moore published an equivalent set of axioms. Some of the axioms coincide, while some of the axioms in Moore's system are theorems in Hilbert's and vice-versa.
Hilbert's approach signaled the shift to the modern
axiomatic method. Axioms are not taken as self-evident truths. Geometry may treat
things, about which we have powerful intuitions, but it is not necessary to assign any explicit meaning to the undefined concepts. The elements, such as
point,
line,
plane, and others, could be substituted, as Hilbert says, by tables, chairs, glasses of beer and other such objects. It is their defined relationships that are discussed.
Hilbert first enumerates the undefined concepts: point, line, plane, lying on (a relation between points and planes), betweenness, congruence of pairs of points, and
congruence of
angles. The axioms unify both the
plane geometry and
solid geometry of Euclid in a single system.
The 23 Problems
He put forth a most influential list of 23 unsolved problems at the
International Congress of Mathematicians in
Paris in 1900. This is generally reckoned the most successful and deeply considered compilation of open problems ever to be produced by an individual mathematician.
After re-working the foundations of classical geometry, Hilbert could have extrapolated to the rest of mathematics. His approach differed, however, from the later 'foundationalist' Russell-Whitehead or 'encyclopedist'
Nicolas Bourbaki, and from his contemporary
Giuseppe Peano. The mathematical community as a whole could enlist in problems, which he had identified as crucial aspects of the areas of mathematics he took to be key.
The problem set was launched as a talk "The Problems of Mathematics" presented during the course of the Second International Congress of Mathematicians held in Paris. Here is the introduction of the speech that Hilbert gave:
- Who among us would not be happy to lift the veil behind which is hidden the future; to gaze at the coming developments of our science and at the secrets of its development in the centuries to come? What will be the ends toward which the spirit of future generations of mathematicians will tend? What methods, what new facts will the new century reveal in the vast and rich field of mathematical thought?
He presented fewer than half the problems at the Congress, which were published in the acts of the Congress. In a subsequent publication, he extended the panorama, and arrived at the formulation of the now-canonical 23 Problems of Hilbert. The full text is important, since the exegesis of the questions still can be a matter of inevitable debate, whenever it is asked how many have been solved.
Some of these were solved within a short time. Others have been discussed throughout the 20th century, with a few now taken to be unsuitably open-ended to come to closure. Some even continue to this day to remain a challenge for mathematicians.
Formalism
In an account that had become standard by the mid-century, Hilbert's problem set was also a kind of manifesto, that opened the way for the development of the
formalist school, one of three major schools of mathematics of the 20th century. According to the formalist, mathematics is a game devoid of meaning in which one plays with symbols devoid of meaning according to formal rules which are agreed upon in advance. It is therefore an autonomous activity of thought. There is, however, room to doubt whether Hilbert's own views were simplistically formalist in this sense.
Hilbert's program
In 1920 he proposed explicitly a research project (in
metamathematics, as it was then termed) that became known as
Hilbert's program. He wanted
mathematics to be formulated on a solid and complete logical foundation. He believed that in principle this could be done, by showing that:
- all of mathematics follows from a correctly-chosen finite system of axioms; and
- that some such axiom system is provably consistent through some means such as the epsilon calculus.
He seems to have had both technical and philosophical reasons for formulating this proposal. It affirmed his dislike of what had become known as the
ignorabimus, still an active issue in his time in German thought, and traced back in that formulation to
Emil du Bois-Reymond.
This program is still recognizable in the most popular
philosophy of mathematics, where it is usually called
formalism. For example, the
Bourbaki group adopted a watered-down and selective version of it as adequate to the requirements of their twin projects of (a) writing encyclopedic foundational works, and (b) supporting the
axiomatic method as a research tool. This approach has been successful and influential in relation with Hilbert's work in algebra and functional analysis, but has failed to engage in the same way with his interests in physics and logic.
Gödel's work
Hilbert and the talented mathematicians who worked with him in his enterprise were committed to the project. His attempt to support axiomatized mathematics with definitive principles, which could banish theoretical uncertainties, was however to end in failure.
Gödel demonstrated that any non-contradictory formal system, which was comprehensive enough to include at least arithmetic, cannot demonstrate its completeness by way of its own axioms. In 1931 his
incompleteness theorem showed that Hilbert's grand plan was impossible as stated. The second point cannot in any reasonable way be combined with the first point, as long as the axiom system is genuinely
finitary.
Nevertheless, the subsequent achievements of
proof theory at the very least
clarified consistency as it relates to theories of central concern to mathematicians. Hilbert's work had started logic on this course of clarification; the need to understand Gödel's work then led to the development of
recursion theory and then
mathematical logic as an autonomous discipline in the 1930s. The basis for later
theoretical computer science, in
Alonzo Church and
Alan Turing also grew directly out of this 'debate'.
Functional analysis
Around 1909, Hilbert dedicated himself to the study of differential and
integral equations; his work had direct consequences for important parts of modern functional analysis. In order to carry out these studies, Hilbert introduced the concept of an infinite dimensional
Euclidean space, later called
Hilbert space. His work in this part of analysis provided the basis for important contributions to the mathematics of physics in the next two decades, though from an unanticipated direction.
Later on,
Stefan Banach amplified the concept, defining
Banach spaces. Hilbert space is the most important single idea in the area of
functional analysis that grew up around it during the 20th century.
Physics
Until 1912, Hilbert was almost exclusively a "pure" mathematician. When planning a visit from Bonn, where he was immersed in studying physics, his fellow mathematician and friend
Hermann Minkowski joked he had to spend 10 days in quarantine before being able to visit Hilbert. In fact, Minkowski seems responsible for most of Hilbert's physics investigations prior to 1912, including their joint seminar in the subject in 1905.
In 1912, three years after his friend's death, Hilbert turned his focus to the subject almost exclusively. He arranged to have a "physics tutor" for himself.
[21] He started studying
kinetic gas theory and moved on to elementary
radiation theory and the molecular theory of matter. Even after the war started in 1914, he continued seminars and classes where the works of
Einstein and others were followed closely.
Hilbert invited Einstein to Göttingen to deliver a week of lectures in June-July 1915 on general relativity and his developing theory of gravity.
[22] The exchange of ideas led to the final form of the field equations of
General Relativity, namely the
Einstein field equations and the Einstein-Hilbert action. In spite of the fact that Einstein and Hilbert never engaged in a public priority dispute, there has been some
dispute about the discovery of the field equations.
Additionally, Hilbert's work anticipated and assisted several advances in the
mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics. His work was a key aspect of
Hermann Weyl and
John von Neumann's work on the mathematical equivalence of
Werner Heisenberg's
matrix mechanics and
Erwin Schrödinger's
wave equation and his namesake
Hilbert space plays an important part in quantum theory. In 1926 von Neuman showed that if atomic states were understood as vectors in Hilbert space, then they would correspond with both Schrodinger's wave function theory and Heisenberg's matrices.
[23]
Throughout this immersion in physics, Hilbert worked on putting rigor into the mathematics of physics. While highly dependent on higher math, the physicist tended to be "sloppy" with it. To a "pure" mathematician like Hilbert, this was both "ugly" and difficult to understand. As he began to understand the physics and how the physicists were using mathematics, he developed a coherent mathematical theory for what he found, most importantly in the area of
integral equations. When his colleague
Richard Courant wrote the now classic
Methods of Mathematical Physics including some of Hilbert's ideas, he added Hilbert's name as author even though Hilbert had not directly contributed to the writing. Hilbert said "Physics is too hard for physicists", implying that the necessary mathematics was generally beyond them; the Courant-Hilbert book made it easier for them.
Number theory
Hilbert unified the field of
algebraic number theory with his 1897 treatise
Zahlbericht (literally "report on numbers"). He disposed of
Waring's problem in the wide sense. He then had little more to publish on the subject; but the emergence of
Hilbert modular forms in the dissertation of a student means his name is further attached to a major area.
He made a series of conjectures on
class field theory. The concepts were highly influential, and his own contribution is seen in the names of the
Hilbert class field and the
Hilbert symbol of
local class field theory. Results on them were mostly proved by 1930, after breakthrough work by
Teiji Takagi that established him as Japan's first mathematician of international stature.
Hilbert did not work in the central areas of
analytic number theory, but his name has become known for the Hilbert–Pólya conjecture, for reasons that are anecdotal.
Miscellaneous talks, essays, and contributions
See also
Notes
1.
^ David Hilbert. Encyclopædia Britannica (
2007). Retrieved on 2007-09-08.
2.
^ Reid 1996, pp. 1–2; also on p. 8, Reid notes that there is some ambiguity of exactly where Hilbert was born. Hilbert himself stated that he was born in Königsberg.
3.
^ Reid 1996, pp. 4–7.
4.
^ Reid 1996, p. 11.
5.
^ Reid 1996, p. 12.
6.
^ Reid 1996, p. 36.
7.
^ Reid 1996, p. 139.
8.
^ Reid 1996, p. 121.
9.
^ The Mathematics Genealogy Project - David Hilbert. Retrieved on 2007-07-07.
10.
^ (Hilbert's colleagues exiled)
11.
^ Reid 1996, p. 205.
12.
^ Reid 1996, p. 213.
13.
^ Reid 1996, p. 220.
14.
^ Reid 1996, pp. 36–37.
15.
^ Reid 1996, p. 34.
16.
^ Reid 1996, p. 37.
17.
^ Reid 1996, p. 37.
18.
^ cf. Reid 1996, pp. 148–149.
19.
^ Reid 1996, p. 148.
20.
^ Reid 1996, p. 150.
21.
^ Reid 1996, p. 129.
22.
^ Sauer 1999, Folsing 1998.
23.
^ It is of interest to note that in 1926, the year after the matrix mechanics formulation of quantum theory by
Max Born and
Werner Heisenberg, the mathematician
John von Neumann became an assistant to David Hilbert at Göttingen. When von Neumann left in 1932, von Neumann’s book on the mathematical foundations of quantum mechanics, based on Hilbert’s mathematics, was published under the title
Mathematische Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik. See: Norman Macrae,
John von Neumann: The Scientific Genius Who Pioneered the Modern Computer, Game Theory, Nuclear Deterrence, and Much More (Reprinted by the American Mathematical Society, 1999) and Reid 1996.
24.
^ Some Famous People with Finite Erdős Numbers.
25.
^ Wolfram MathWorld – Cayley-Klein-Herbert metric
26.
^ Wolfram MathWorld – Hilbert class field
27.
^ Wolfram MathWorld – Hilbert inequality
28.
^ Wolfram MathWorld – Hilbert Series
29.
^ Wolfram MathWorld – Hilbert’s constants
References
Primary literature in English translation
- Ewald, William B., ed., 1996. From Kant to Hilbert: A Source Book in the Foundations of Mathematics, 2 vols. Oxford Uni. Press.
- 1918. "Axiomatic thought," 1115–14.
- 1922. "The new grounding of mathematics: First report," 1115–33.
- 1923. "The logical foundations of mathematics," 1134–47.
- 1930. "Logic and the knowledge of nature," 1157–65.
- 1931. "The grounding of elementary number theory," 1148–56.
- 1904. "On the foundations of logic and arithmetic," 129–38.
- 1925. "On the infinite," 367–92.
- 1927. "The foundations of mathematics," with comment by Weyl and Appendix by Bernays, 464–89.
- Jean van Heijenoort, 1967. From Frege to Godel: A Source Book in Mathematical Logic, 1879–1931. Harvard Univ. Press.
- David Hilbert; Cohn-Vossen, S. (1999). Geometry and Imagination. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-1998-4. - an accessible set of lectures originally for the citizens of Göttingen.
- David Hilbert (2004). in Michael Hallett and Ulrich Majer: David Hilbert's Lectures on the foundations of Mathematics and Physics, 1891–1933. Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. ISBN 3-540-64373-7.
Secondary literature
- B, Umberto, 2003. Il flauto di Hilbert. Storia della matematica. UTET, ISBN 88-7750-852-3
- Corry, L., Renn, J., and Stachel, J., 1997, "Belated Decision in the Hilbert-Einstein Priority Dispute," Science 278: nn-nn.
- Ivor Grattan-Guinness, 2000. The Search for Mathematical Roots 1870-1940. Princeton Uni. Press.
- Gray, Jeremy, 2000. The Hilbert Challenge, ISBN 0-19-850651-1
- Piergiorgio Odifreddi, 2003. Divertimento Geometrico - Da Euclide ad Hilbert. Bollati Boringhieri, ISBN 88-339-5714-4. A clear exposition of the "errors" of Euclid and of the solutions presented in the Grundlagen der Geometrie, with reference to non-Euclidean geometry.
- Reid, Constance, 1996. Hilbert, Springer, ISBN 0-387-94674-8. The biography in English.
- Sauer, Tilman, 1999. "The relativity of discovery: Hilbert's first note on the foundations of physics", Arch. Hist. Exact Sci., v53, pp 529-575. (Available from Cornell University Library, as a downloadable Pdf http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/9811050)
- Thorne, Kip, 1995. Black Holes and Time Warps: Einstein's Outrageous Legacy, W. W. Norton & Company; Reprint edition. ISBN 0-393-31276-3.
- Folsing, Albrecht, 1998. Albert Einstein, Penguin.
- Mehra, Jagdish, 1974. Einstein, Hilbert, and the Theory of Gravitation, Reidel.
- Paolo Mancosu (1998). From Brouwer to Hilbert, The Debate on the Foundations of Mathematics in the 1920's. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509631-2.
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Ludwig Otto Blumenthal (July 20, 1876 – November 12, 1944) was a German mathematician and professor at RWTH Aachen University, Germany. He was born in Frankfurt, Germany. A student of David Hilbert, Blumenthal was an editor of Mathematische Annalen.
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Richard Courant (born January 8, 1888 – January 27, 1972) was a German American mathematician.
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Erich Hecke (September 20, 1887 – February 13, 1947) was a German mathematician. He obtained his PhD in Göttingen under the supervision of David Hilbert. Kurt Reidemeister and Heinrich Behnke were among his students.
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Hellmuth Kneser (April 16, 1898 - August 23, 1973) was a German mathematician, who made notable contributions to group theory and topology. His most famous result may be his theorem on the existence of a prime decomposition for 3-manifolds.
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..... Click the link for more information. Erhard Schmidt (January 13, 1876 – December 6, 1959) was a German mathematician born in Dorpat (now Tartu, Estonia). His advisor was David Hilbert and he was awarded his doctorate at Göttingen in 1905.
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Władysław Hugo Dionizy Steinhaus (January 14, 1887 - February 25, 1972) was a Polish mathematician and educator.
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..... Click the link for more information. Teiji Takagi (高木 貞治 Takagi Teiji, April 21,1875 - February 28,1960) was a Japanese mathematician, best known for proving the Takagi existence theorem in class field theory.
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Hermann Klaus Hugo Weyl (November 9 1885 – December 9 1955) was a German mathematician. Although much of his working life was spent in Zürich, Switzerland and then Princeton, he is closely identified with the University of Göttingen tradition of mathematics, represented by
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Ernst Friedrich Ferdinand Zermelo (July 27 1871, Berlin, German Empire – May 21 1953, Freiburg im Breisgau, West Germany) was a German mathematician, whose work has major implications for the foundations of mathematics and hence on philosophy.
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In mathematics, Hilbert's basis theorem, first proved by David Hilbert in 1888, states that, if k is a field, then every ideal in the ring of multivariate polynomials k[x1, x2, ...
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Hilbert's axioms are a set of 20 assumptions (originally 21), David Hilbert proposed in 1899 as the foundation for a modern treatment of Euclidean geometry. Other well-known modern axiomatizations of Euclidean geometry are those of Tarski and of George Birkhoff.
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