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Regular Polytopes (book)

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Language
  
English

Pages
  
321

Originally published
  
1948

OCLC
  
798003


Subject
  
Geometry

ISBN
  
0-486-61480-8

Page count
  
321

Regular Polytopes (book) t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcS132KcBiOvhxlShi

Publisher
  
Methuen, Dover Publications

Preceded by
  
Dimensional Analogy (1923 essay)

Author
  
Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter

Similar
  
Works by Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter, Polytope books, Mathematics books

Regular Polytopes is a mathematical geometry book written by Canadian mathematician Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter. Originally published in 1947, the book was updated and republished in 1963 and 1973.

Contents

The book is a comprehensive survey of the geometry of regular polytopes, the generalisation of regular polygons and regular polyhedra to higher dimensions. Originating with an essay entitled Dimensional Analogy written in 1923, the first edition of the book took Coxeter twenty-four years to complete.

Overview

Regular Polytopes is a standard reference work on regular polygons, polyhedra and their higher dimensional analogues. It is unusual in the breadth of its coverage; its combination of mathematical rigour with geometric insight; and the clarity of its diagrams and illustrations.

Coxeter starts by introducing two-dimensional polygons and three-dimensional polyhedra. He then gives a rigorous combinatorial definition of "regularity" and uses it to show that there are no other convex regular polyhedra apart from the five Platonic solids. The concept of "regularity" is extended to non-convex shapes such as star polygons and star polyhedra; to tessellations and honeycombs and to polytopes in higher dimensions. Coxeter introduces and uses the groups generated by reflections that became known as Coxeter groups.

The book combines algebraic rigour with clear explanations, many of which are illustrated with diagrams, and with a diagramatic notation for Wythoff constructions. The black and white plates in the book show solid models of three-dimensional polyhedra, and wire-frame models of projections of some higher-dimensional polytopes. At the end of each chapter Coxeter includes an "Historical remarks" section which provides an historical perspective of the development of the subject.

The challenge of comprehending higher dimensions was addressed by Coxeter on page 118: "There are three ways of approaching the Euclidean geometry of four or more dimensions: the axiomatic, the algebraic (or analytical) and the intuitive. The first two have been admirably expounded by Sommerville and Neville, and we shall presuppose some familiarity with such treatises." Concerning the third, Poincaré wrote: "A man who really pursues it, will end up holding on to the fourth dimension".

Contents

The contents of the third edition (1973) of Regular Polytopes are as follows:

Reception

In a brief review of the 1963 Dover reprint in Math Science Network (MR0151873) an anonymous reviewer writes that “anyone interested in the relationship of group theory to geometry should own a copy.” The original 1948 edition received a more complete review by M. Goldberg in MR0027148, and the third edition was reviewed telegraphically in MR0370327.

References

Regular Polytopes (book) Wikipedia