ABSTRACT

The long list of mathematical works written by Ibn al-Haytham includes several that are still missing. Among these are three that, in the mathematics of infinitesimals, speak for themselves: The Greatest Line that can be Drawn in a Segment of a Circle, a Treatise on Centres of Gravity and a Treatise on the Qarasṭūn. These treatises are all concerned with the geometry of measure. Their absence not only deprives historians of mathematics of facts that would have helped them to appreciate more clearly the range of Ibn al-Haytham’s œuvre, but also, more seriously, it makes it absolutely impossible for them to understand the structures of this œuvre and the network of meanings that they carry. If the first of the treatises cited above had been at our disposal, we should have a better understanding of the distance the author of a treatise on problems of figures with equal perimeters, on figures with equal areas and on the solid angle, travelled along the road of what was later to be called the calculus of variations.