Salusbury, Thomas, Mathematical collections and translations (Tome I), 1667

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1
PROPOSITION.
The Circle is a Mean-Proportional betwixt any two
Regular Homogeneal Poligons, one of which is cir­
cumſcribed about it, and the other Iſoperimetral to
it: Moreover, it being leſſe than all the circumſcri­
bed, it is, on the contrary, bigger than all the Iſoperi­
metral.
And, again of the circumſcribed, thoſe that
have more angles are leſſer than thoſe that have
fewer; and on the other ſide of the Iſoperimetral,
thoſe of more angles are bigger.
Of the two like Poligons A and B, let A be circumſcribed
about the Circle A, and let the other B, be Iſoperime­
tral to the ſaid Circle: I ſay, that the Circle is the Mean­
proportional betwixt them.
For that (having drawn the Semidi­
ameter A C) the Circle being equal to that Right-angled Trian­
gle, of whoſe Sides including the Right angle, the one is equal
63[Figure 63]
to the Semidiameter A C, and the other to the Circumference:
And likewiſe the Poligon A being equal to the right angled Tri­
angle, that about the right angle hath one of its Sides equal to
the ſaid right line A C, and the other to the Perimeter of the ſaid
Poligon: It is manifeſt, that the circumſcribed Poligon hath the
ſame proportion to the Circle, that its Perimeter hath to the Cir­
cumference of the ſaid Circle; that is, to the Perimeter of the
Poligon B, which is ſuppoſed equal to the ſaid Circumference:
But the Poligon A hath a proportion to the Poligon B, double to
that of its Perimeter, to the Perimeter of B (they being like Fi­
gures:) Therefore the Circle A is the Mean-proportional be­
tween the two Poligons A and B.
And the Poligon A being
bigger than the Circle A, it is manifeſt that the ſaid Circle
A is bigger than the Poligon B, its Iſoperimetral, and conſe­
quently the greateſt of all Regular Poligons that are Iſoperimetral

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