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method of exhaustion : ウィキペディア英語版
method of exhaustion

The method of exhaustion (ラテン語:''methodus exhaustionibus'', or フランス語:''méthode des anciens'') is a method of finding the area of a shape by inscribing inside it a sequence of polygons whose areas converge to the area of the containing shape. If the sequence is correctly constructed, the difference in area between the ''n''-th polygon and the containing shape will become arbitrarily small as ''n'' becomes large. As this difference becomes arbitrarily small, the possible values for the area of the shape are systematically "exhausted" by the lower bound areas successively established by the sequence members.
The method of exhaustion typically required a form of proof by contradiction, known as ''reductio ad absurdum''. This amounts to finding an area of a region by first comparing it to the area of a second region (which can be “exhausted” so that its area becomes arbitrarily close to the true area). The proof involves assuming that the true area is greater than the second area, and then proving that assertion false, and then assuming that it is less than the second area, and proving that assertion false, too.
==History==

The idea originated in the late 5th century BC with Antiphon, although it is not entirely clear how well he understood it.〔(The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive )〕 The theory was made rigorous a few decades later by Eudoxus of Cnidus, who used it to calculate areas and volumes. It was later reinvented in China by Liu Hui in the 3rd century AD in order to find the area of a circle.〔, (Chapter , p. 279 )
〕 The first use of the term was in 1647 by Grégoire de Saint-Vincent in ''Opus geometricum quadraturae circuli et sectionum''.
The method of exhaustion is seen as a precursor to the methods of calculus. The development of analytical geometry and rigorous integral calculus in the 17th-19th centuries subsumed the method of exhaustion so that it is no longer explicitly used to solve problems. An important alternative approach was Cavalieri's principle, also termed the "method of indivisibles", which eventually evolved into the infinitesimal calculus of Roberval, Torricelli, Wallis, Leibniz, and others.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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