Point-pair Separation
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In a cyclic order, such as the
real projective line In geometry, a real projective line is a projective line over the real numbers. It is an extension of the usual concept of a line that has been historically introduced to solve a problem set by visual perspective: two parallel lines do not interse ...
, two pairs of points separate each other when they occur alternately in the order. Thus the ordering ''a b c d'' of four points has (''a,c'') and (''b,d'') as separating pairs. This point-pair separation is an invariant of projectivities of the line. The concept was described by
G. B. Halsted George Bruce Halsted (November 25, 1853 – March 16, 1922), usually cited as G. B. Halsted, was an American mathematician who explored foundations of geometry and introduced non-Euclidean geometry into the United States through his own work and ...
at the outset of his ''Synthetic Projective Geometry'': {{quote, With regard to a pair of different points of those on a straight, all remaining fall into two classes, such that every point belongs to one and only one. If two points belong to different classes with regard to a pair of points, then also the latter two belong to different classes with regard to the first two. Two such point pairs are said to 'separate each other.' Four different points on a straight can always be partitioned in one and only one way into pairs separating each other. Given any pair of points on a projective line, they separate a third point from its harmonic conjugate. A pair of lines in a pencil separates another pair when a transversal crosses the pairs in separated points.


See also

*
Separation relation In mathematics, a separation relation is a formal way to arrange a set of objects in an unoriented circle. It is defined as a quaternary relation ' satisfying certain axioms, which is interpreted as asserting that ''a'' and ''c'' separate ''b'' from ...


References

*
G. B. Halsted George Bruce Halsted (November 25, 1853 – March 16, 1922), usually cited as G. B. Halsted, was an American mathematician who explored foundations of geometry and introduced non-Euclidean geometry into the United States through his own work and ...
(1906
''Synthetic Projective Geometry''
Introduction, page 7 via Internet Archive * Edward V. Huntington and Kurt E. Rosinger (1932
"Postulates for Separation of Point-Pairs (Reversible order on a closed line)"
Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 67(4): 61-145 via
JSTOR JSTOR (; short for ''Journal Storage'') is a digital library founded in 1995 in New York City. Originally containing digitized back issues of academic journals, it now encompasses books and other primary sources as well as current issues of j ...
* Bertrand Russell (1903) The Principles of Mathematics
Separation of couples
via Internet Archive Projective geometry