Johann Heinrich Lambert's memoir "Theorie der Parallellinien": A review with commentary

Abstract

We review the memoir heorie der Parallellinien by Johann Heinrich Lambert, written in 1766. Lambert, a victim of the prejudices of his time, conceived this memoir as an attempt to prove the so-called parallel postulate of Euclid's Elements, and consequently, the non-existence of the geometry that we now call hyperbolic geometry. In fact, by developing the foundations of a geometry obtained by replacing the parallel postulate with its negation while keeping Euclid's other postulates unchanged, Lambert was hoping to arrive at a contradiction. Of course, he failed in his endeavor, but these attempts at proving the parallel postulate implicitly contain, without Lambert having foreseen it, fundamental results of hyperbolic geometry, the discovery of which, by Lobachevsky, Bolyai and Gauss, was not to take place until the following century. Thus, Lambert's memoir (which he did not intend to publish but which was eventually published in 1895) constitutes one of the founding texts of non-Euclidean geometry. Spherical geometry is one of the three geometries of constant curvature, the other two being Euclidean geometry and hyperbolic geometry. In this sense, along with hyperbolic geometry, spherical geometry constitutes one of the two non-Euclidean geometries. In fact, Lambert, like Lobachevsky and others after him, understood the deep relationships between the three geometries: Euclidean, spherical, and hyperbolic, in particular the formal and the more profound analogies between the trigonometric formulae, the properties of birectangular isosceles quadrilaterals and of trirectangular quadrilaterals, the monotonicity properties (which can be formulated in terms of convexity properties) which hold in opposite senses in spherical and hyperbolic geometry which at some points he calls a sphere of imaginary radius. It is for these reasons that we decided to include in this volume, dedicated to spherical geometry, a chapter on this important memoir by Lambert, trying to highlight its most important ideas. This paper will appear as a chapter in the book ``Spherical Geometry in the Eighteenth Century I: Euler, Lagrange and Lambert'', ed. R. Caddeo and A. Papadopoulos, Springer Nature Switzerland, 2026.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…