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The Geometry is divided into three books. In the first book Descartes briefly explains his method. He says that every geometric problem may be reduced to a problem of straight lines; and he points out that, in order to find these lines, nothing more advanced is required than the five fundamental operations of Arithmetic, viz.: Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication, Division, and Root Extraction. He advises:—(1) That the problem should be imagined as done.(2) That then lines, whether known or unknown, which appear necessary in its solution, should be named.(3) And finally, that their relation to each other should be sought, and expressed by means of an equation or equations. Descartes strongly advocates this analytic treatment of Geometry as giving greater clearness and more continuity of argument, qualities lacking in the work of the Ancients, who probably did not understand where such reasoning would carry them, and whose isolated proofs were necessarily wanting in connection and generality.
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Elizabeth Sanderson Haldane, [https://books.google.com/books?id=7VsRAAAAYAAJ Descartes: His Life and Times] (1905) Ch. XVII. Descartes' Geometry

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