"The Greeks would have said... we know a much better way of taking a square root. ...the ancient Greeks thought entirely geometrically, not arithmetically. And they would... do the following. If you want to solve x^2 = N, you should first... think of whether N is bigger than or equal to one. Suppose that case 1) N < 1. ...Draw a [horizontal] line segment of length one and then [within and from the end of that segment]... make a segment of size N. And then with the center of the [length one] segment you draw a circle so this is a [unit length] diameter. And you... [draw a vertical line from the end of the N segment inside the circle] up here [to intersect the circle] and then... look at this quantity x... this [top angle of the largest triangle circumscribed by the circle] is a right angle by Thales theorem, so we have some similar triangles. So [side x, side 1 from the large circumscribed triangle] \frac{x}{1} = \frac{N}{x} [side N, side x from the small left triangle] by similar \triangle's . And so x^2 = N. So Geometrically finding a square root is... a relatively simple... rule or construction, but arithmetically much more difficult. What happens if N is bigger than one? Well then you just interchange the roles of the N and the one. Case 2) N \ge 1. So you start by having a diameter of size N and then you make [a line segment of length] 1 here [from the end of the segment of length N to within that segment] and then otherwise do exactly the same thing [as in the above, case 1]. ...x will be square root, x^2 = N, by the same argument."
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N. J. Wildberger, "A Brief Course on the History of Mathematics," MathHistory6a: Polynomial equations (2011) 28:48-31:30.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_mathematics
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Ancient Greek mathematics
Ancient was developed from the 7th century BC to the 4th century AD by Greek speaking peoples along the shores of the Eastern Mediterranean. The period following Alexander the Great is sometimes referred to as Hellenistic mathematics. The word "mathematics" itself derives from the ancient Greek μάθημα (mathema), meaning "subject of instruction". The use of generalized mathematical theories and proofs is the key difference between Greek mathematics and those of preceding civilizations.
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