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April 10, 2026

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"Hipparchus... the following little summary, taken from Delambre, will shew what manner of man he was. ...[H]e ...determined (...not with absolute accuracy) the precession of the equinoxes, the inequality of the sun, and the place of its apogee, as well as its mean motion: the mean motion of the moon, its nodes and its apogee: the equation of the centre of the moon and the inclination of its orbit. He had discovered a second inequality of the moon (the ), of which he could not, for want of proper observations, find the period and the law. He had commenced a more regular course of observations for the purpose of supplying his successors with the means of finding the theory of the planets. He had both a spherical and a plane trigonometry. He had traced a by : he knew how to calculate eclipses of the moon and to use them for the improvement of the tables: he had an approximate knowledge of es, more correct than Ptolemy's. He invented the method of describing the positions of places by reference to and . What he wanted was only better instruments. Yet in his determination of the equations of the centres of the sun and moon and of the inclination of the moon, he erred only by a few minutes. For 300 years after his time astronomy was stationary. Ptolemy followed him with little originality. Some 800 years later the Arabs added a few more discoveries and more accurate determinations and then the science is stationary again till Copernicus, Tycho and Kepler."

- History of trigonometry

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"[T]hough Heron's ability is sufficiently indicated by... [his] proofs, as a general rule he confines himself merely to giving directions and formulae. ...[H]e availed himself of the highest mathematics of his time. Thus in the ', two chapters treat of the mode of drawing a plan of an irregular field and of restoring, from a plan, the boundaries of a field in which only a few landmarks remain. ... The method is closely similar to the use of latitude and longitude introduced by Hipparchus. So...Heron gives, for finding the area of a regular polygon from the square of its side, formulae which imply a knowledge of trigonometry. Suppose F_n to be the area of a regular polygon of which {a_n} is a side, and let c_n be the coefficient by which {a_n}^2 is to be multiplied in order to produce the equation F_n = c_n {a_n}^2 then it is easy to see that c_n = \frac{n}{4} \cot \frac{180^\circ}{n}. ...[H]is approximations are generally near enough. We need not be surprised... Hipparchus made a table of chords... [i.e.] the coefficients k_n were known, with the aid of which a_n = k_n r, where r is the radius. Then c_n = \frac{n}{4} \sqrt{\frac{4}{{k_n}^2}-1}, and Heron was competent to extract such square roots. But Heron does not use the sexagesimal fractions, and... sexagesimal fractions were always, as... afterwards called, astronomical fractions... [S]ave by Heron, trigonometry was generally conceived to be a chapter of astronomy and was not used for the calculation of terrestrial triangles."

- History of trigonometry

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"Now, it is worth remarking, that this property of the table of sines, which has been so long known in the East, was not observed by the mathematicians of Europe till about two hundred years ago […] If we were not already acquainted withthe high antiquity of the astronomy of Hindostan, nothing could appear more singular than to find a system of trigonometry, so perfect in its principles, in a book so ancient as the Surya Siddhanta […]’ ‘In the progress of science […] the invention of trigonometry is to be considered as a step of great importance, and of considerable difficulty. It is an application of arithmetic to geometry […] (and) a little reflection will convince us, that he, who first formed the idea of exhibiting, in arithmetical tables, the ratios of the sides and angles of all possible triangles, and contrived the means of constructing such tables, must have been a man of profound thought, and of extensive knowledge. However, ancient, therefore, any book may be, in which we meet with a system of trigonometry, we may be assured, that it was not written in the infancy of science.’ ‘As we cannot, therefore, suppose the art of trigonometrical calculation to have been introduced till after a long preparation of other acquisitions, both geometrical and astronomical, we must reckon far back from the date of the Surya Siddhanta, before we come to the origin of the mathematical sciences in India […] Even among the Greeks […] an interval, of at least 1000 years, elapsed from the first observations in astronomy, to the invention of trigonometry; and we have surely no reason to suppose, that the progress of knowledge has been more rapid in other countries."

- History of trigonometry

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