Memorabilia Mathematica; or, the Philomath's Quotation-Book

Part 1, sect. 29.

Chapter 2075 wordsPublic domain

=1647.= As Gauss first pointed out, the problem of cyclotomy, or division of the circle into a number of equal parts, depends in a very remarkable way upon arithmetical considerations. We have here the earliest and simplest example of those relations of the theory of numbers to transcendental analysis, and even to pure geometry, which so often unexpectedly present themselves, and which, at first sight, are so mysterious.--MATHEWS, G. B.

_Theory of Numbers (Cambridge, 1892),