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Projective spaces allow a neat axiomatic characterization in terms of points, lines, and their incidences. In this context, the famous axiom of O. Veblen and J. Young from 1916 is crucial: ``If \(p_1\), \(p_2\), \(q_1\), \(q_2\) are four pairwise distinct points and the line \(p_1p_2\) intersects \(q_1q_2\), then also \(p_1q_1\) intersects \(p_2q_2\).'' The 20th century saw several attempts to provide axiomatic foundations for affine spaces but all of them leave the realm of pure incidence geometry. In this article, the authors presents three postulates on the incidence of points, lines, and planes and he proves equivalence with \textit{O. Tamaschke}'s axiomatic characterization of affine spaces [Projektive Geometrie. II. Mit einer Einführung in die affine Geometrie. Mannheim-Wien-Zürich: Bibliographisches Institut AG (1972; Zbl 0256.50008)]. The pivotal ``plane intersection postulate'' is modeled after the Veblen-Young axiom in above formulation: ``If \(x_1\), \dots, \(x_5\) are points, no three of which are collinear, and the planes \(x_1x_2x_3\) and \(x_1x_4x_5\) intersect in a line, then also the planes \(x_1x_2x_3\) and \(x_2x_4x_5\) intersect in a line.''
Property / review text: Projective spaces allow a neat axiomatic characterization in terms of points, lines, and their incidences. In this context, the famous axiom of O. Veblen and J. Young from 1916 is crucial: ``If \(p_1\), \(p_2\), \(q_1\), \(q_2\) are four pairwise distinct points and the line \(p_1p_2\) intersects \(q_1q_2\), then also \(p_1q_1\) intersects \(p_2q_2\).'' The 20th century saw several attempts to provide axiomatic foundations for affine spaces but all of them leave the realm of pure incidence geometry. In this article, the authors presents three postulates on the incidence of points, lines, and planes and he proves equivalence with \textit{O. Tamaschke}'s axiomatic characterization of affine spaces [Projektive Geometrie. II. Mit einer Einführung in die affine Geometrie. Mannheim-Wien-Zürich: Bibliographisches Institut AG (1972; Zbl 0256.50008)]. The pivotal ``plane intersection postulate'' is modeled after the Veblen-Young axiom in above formulation: ``If \(x_1\), \dots, \(x_5\) are points, no three of which are collinear, and the planes \(x_1x_2x_3\) and \(x_1x_4x_5\) intersect in a line, then also the planes \(x_1x_2x_3\) and \(x_2x_4x_5\) intersect in a line.'' / rank
 
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Property / reviewed by
 
Property / reviewed by: Hans-Peter Schröcker / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 51A05 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 51A15 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 05B35 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 51A45 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 51D10 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 51D20 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 51D25 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH DE Number
 
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6562527 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
affine spaces
Property / zbMATH Keywords: affine spaces / rank
 
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projective spaces, incidence spaces
Property / zbMATH Keywords: projective spaces, incidence spaces / rank
 
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incidence geometry
Property / zbMATH Keywords: incidence geometry / rank
 
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points
Property / zbMATH Keywords: points / rank
 
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lines
Property / zbMATH Keywords: lines / rank
 
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planes
Property / zbMATH Keywords: planes / rank
 
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parallelism
Property / zbMATH Keywords: parallelism / rank
 
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triangles
Property / zbMATH Keywords: triangles / rank
 
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combinatorial geometries
Property / zbMATH Keywords: combinatorial geometries / rank
 
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exchange conditions
Property / zbMATH Keywords: exchange conditions / rank
 
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Revision as of 14:23, 27 June 2023

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An axiomatic system for affine spaces in terms of points, lines, and planes
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    An axiomatic system for affine spaces in terms of points, lines, and planes (English)
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    4 April 2016
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    Projective spaces allow a neat axiomatic characterization in terms of points, lines, and their incidences. In this context, the famous axiom of O. Veblen and J. Young from 1916 is crucial: ``If \(p_1\), \(p_2\), \(q_1\), \(q_2\) are four pairwise distinct points and the line \(p_1p_2\) intersects \(q_1q_2\), then also \(p_1q_1\) intersects \(p_2q_2\).'' The 20th century saw several attempts to provide axiomatic foundations for affine spaces but all of them leave the realm of pure incidence geometry. In this article, the authors presents three postulates on the incidence of points, lines, and planes and he proves equivalence with \textit{O. Tamaschke}'s axiomatic characterization of affine spaces [Projektive Geometrie. II. Mit einer Einführung in die affine Geometrie. Mannheim-Wien-Zürich: Bibliographisches Institut AG (1972; Zbl 0256.50008)]. The pivotal ``plane intersection postulate'' is modeled after the Veblen-Young axiom in above formulation: ``If \(x_1\), \dots, \(x_5\) are points, no three of which are collinear, and the planes \(x_1x_2x_3\) and \(x_1x_4x_5\) intersect in a line, then also the planes \(x_1x_2x_3\) and \(x_2x_4x_5\) intersect in a line.''
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    affine spaces
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    projective spaces, incidence spaces
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    incidence geometry
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    points
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    lines
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    planes
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    parallelism
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    triangles
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    combinatorial geometries
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    exchange conditions
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