When Euclid composed the Elements around 300 BCE, he insisted that geometry was primary. Every theorem in those thirteen books begins with a construction — a line drawn, a circle described, a figure inscribed. The proof follows not from algebraic manipulation but from the visible, the tangible, the spatial. This was no limitation of his era; it was a philosophical commitment to the primacy of form.
The Algebraic Turn
Descartes changed everything in 1637. By reducing geometric curves to algebraic equations in La Géométrie, he gave mathematicians extraordinary power — and set in motion a centuries-long drift away from spatial reasoning. By the time Hilbert formalized geometry in 1899, the discipline had become subordinate to algebra. The diagram was demoted to illustration; the equation became the proof.
The compass and straightedge are not primitive instruments. They are the original API — a complete interface for constructing every quantity expressible as a nested square root.
Five Solids, Five Elements
Plato's assignment of a Platonic solid to each element in the Timaeus was not mystical indulgence but structural ontology — the recognition that the deepest properties of matter might be captured by the most symmetric forms in three-dimensional space. The tetrahedron for fire, the cube for earth, the dodecahedron for the cosmos itself.