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 <title>Preface to the Second Edition: An Elementary Treatise On Quaternions</title>
 <name>PrefaceToTheSecondEditionAnElementaryTreatiseOnQuaternions</name>
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<parent id="169">An Elementary Treatise on Quaternions</parent>
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 <content>\subsection{Preface to the Second Edition}

From \PMlinkname{An Elementary Treatise On Quaternions}{AnElementaryTreatiseOnQuaternions} by Peter Guthrie Tait.

To the first edition of this work, published in 1867, the
following was prefixed :

THE present work was commenced in 1859, while I was a
Professor of Mathematics, and far more ready at Quaternion
analysis than I can now pretend to be. Had it been then
completed I should have had means of testing its teaching
capabilities, and of improving it, before publication, where found
deficient in that respect.

The duties of another Chair, and Sir W. Hamilton's wish that
my volume should not appear till after the publication of his
\emph{Elements}, interrupted my already extensive preparations. I had
worked out nearly all the examples of Analytical Geometry in
Todhunter's Collection, and I had made various physical applica
tions of the Calculus, especially to Crystallography, to Geometrical
Optics, and to the Induction of Currents, in addition to those on
Kinematics, Electrodynamics, Fresnel s Wave Surface, \&amp;c., which
are reprinted in the present work from the \emph{Quarterly Mathematical
Journal} and the \emph{Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh}.

Sir W. Hamilton, when I saw him but a few days before his
death, urged me to prepare my work as soon as possible, his being
almost ready for publication. He then expressed, more strongly
perhaps than he had ever done before, his profound conviction of
the importance of Quaternions to the progress of physical science;
and his desire that a really elementary treatise on the subject
should soon be published.

I regret that I have so imperfectly fulfilled this last request of my revered friend. When it was made I was already engaged,
along with Sir W. Thomson, in the laborious work of preparing
a large Treatise on Natural Philosophy. The present volume has
thus been written under very disadvantageous circumstances,
especially as I have not found time to work up the mass of
materials which I had originally collected for it, but which I
had not put into a fit state for publication. I hope, however,
that I have to some extent succeeded in producing a thoroughly
elementary work, intelligible to any ordinary student; and that
the numerous examples I have given, though not specially
chosen so as to display the full merits of Quaternions, will
yet sufficiently shew their admirable simplicity and naturalness
to induce the reader to attack the \emph{Lectures} and the \emph{Elements};
where he will find, in profusion, stores of valuable results, and
of elegant yet powerful analytical investigations, such as are
contained in the writings of but a very few of the greatest
mathematicians. For a succinct account of the steps by which
Hamilton was led to the invention of Quaternions, and for
other interesting information regarding that remarkable genius,
I may refer to a slight sketch of his life and works in the
North British Review for September 1866.

It will be found that I have not servilely followed even so
great a master, although dealing with a subject which is entirely
his own. I cannot, of course, tell in every case what I have
gathered from his published papers, or from his voluminous
correspondence, and what I may have made out for myself.
Some theorems and processes which I have given, though wholly
my own, in the sense of having been made out for myself before
the publication of the Elements, I have since found there. Others
also may be, for I have not yet read that tremendous volume
completely, since much of it bears on developments unconnected
with Physics. But I have endeavoured throughout to point out
to the reader all the more important parts of the work which I
know to be wholly due to Hamilton. A great part, indeed, may
be said to be obvious to any one who has mastered the pre
liminaries; still I think that, in the two last Chapters especially,
a good deal of original matter will be found.

The volume is essentially a working one, and, particularly in
the later Chapters, is rather a collection of examples than a
detailed treatise on a mathematical method. I have constantly
aimed at avoiding too great extension; and in pursuance of
this object have omitted many valuable elementary portions
of the subject. One of these, the treatment of Quaternion
logarithms and exponentials, I greatly regret not having given.
But if I had printed all that seemed to me of use or interest to
the student, I might easily have rivalled the bulk of one of
Hamilton's volumes. The beginner is recommended merely to
\emph{read} the first five Chapters, then to \emph{work} at Chapters VI,
VII, VIII \footnotemark (to which numerous easy Examples are appended).
After this he may work at the first five, with their (more
difficult) Examples; and the remainder of the book should
then present no difficulty.

Keeping always in view, as the great end of every mathe
matical method, the physical applications, I have endeavoured
to treat the subject as much as possible from a geometrical
instead of an analytical point of view. Of course, if we premise
the properties of \emph{i, j, k} merely, it is possible to construct from
them the whole system \footnotemark; just as we deal with the imaginary
of Algebra, or, to take a closer analogy, just as Hamilton
himself dealt with Couples, Triads, and Sets. This may be
interesting to the pure analyst, but it is repulsive to the
physical student, who should be led to look upon \emph{i, j, k}, from
the very first as geometric realities, not as algebraic imaginaries.

The most striking peculiarity of the Calculus is that \emph{mul
tiplication is not generally commutative}, i.e. that \emph{qr} is in general
different from \emph{rg, r} and \emph{q} being quaternions. Still it is to
be remarked that something similar is true, in the ordinary
coordinate methods, of operators and functions: and therefore

% Notes

\footnotetext{In this edition these Chapters are numbered VII, VIII, IX, respectively
Aug. 1889.}

\footnotetext{This has been done by Hamilton himself, as one among many methods he has employed; and it is also the foundation of a memoir by M. Allegret, entitled \emph{Essai sur le Calcul des Quaternions} (Paris, 1862).}</content>
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