Constructive Geometry and the Parallel Postulate
Michael Beeson

TL;DR
This paper develops Euclidean geometry within intuitionistic logic, analyzing three versions of the parallel postulate and establishing their logical relationships and independence using constructive methods.
Contribution
It introduces a constructive framework for Euclidean geometry, defining Euclidean fields without case distinctions, and clarifies the implications and independence of three parallel postulate versions.
Findings
Strong parallel postulate implies Euclid 5
Euclid 5 implies the strong parallel postulate
Playfair's postulate does not imply Euclid 5
Abstract
Euclidean geometry consists of straightedge-and-compass constructions and reasoning about the results of those constructions. We show that Euclidean geometry can be developed using only intuitionistic logic. We consider three versions of Euclid's parallel postulate: Euclid's own formulation in his Postulate 5; Playfair's 1795 version, and a new version we call the strong parallel postulate. These differ in that Euclid's version and the new version both assert the existence of a point where two lines meet, while Playfair's version makes no existence assertion. Classically, the models of Euclidean (straightedge-and-compass) geometry are planes over Euclidean fields. We prove a similar theorem for constructive Euclidean geometry, by showing how to define addition and multiplication without a case distinction about the sign of the arguments. With intuitionistic logic, there are two possible…
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