"It is certain that from its completeness, uniformity and faultlessness, from its arrangement and progressive character, and from the universal adoption of the completest and best line of argument, Euclid’s “Elements” stand pre-eminently at the head of all human productions. In no science, in no department of knowledge, has anything appeared like this work: for upward of 2000 years it has commanded the admiration of mankind, and that period has suggested little toward its improvement."
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Philip Kelland, Lectures on the Principles of Demonstrative Mathematics, (London, 1843), p. 17. Reported in Moritz (1914)
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Euclid’s Elements
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