References
Apollonius of Perga. 2013. Conics: Books I-IV. Translated by R. Catesby Taliaferro, Michael N. Fried, and William H. Donahue. Santa Fe, NM: Green Lion Press.
Archimedes of Syracuse. 2004. On the Sphere and the Cylinder. In The Works of Archimedes: The Two Books On the Sphere and the Cylinder, edited by Reviel Netz, vol. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Aristophanes. 2000. Birds. Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson. Loeb Classical Library 179. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Cawthorne, Stephanie, and Judy Green. 2014. Cubes, Conic Sections, and Crocket Johnson. Convergence 11.
Dilworth v. Dudley, et al. 1996. 75 F.3d 307 (7th Cir.).
Dudley, Underwood. 1994. The Trisectors. Spectrum, vol. 16. Mathematical Association of America.
Dürer, Albrecht. 1977. The Painter’s Manual: A Manual of Measurement of Lines, Areas, and Solids by Means of Compass and Ruler Assembled by Albrecht Dürer for the Use of All Lovers of Art with Appropriate Illustrations Arranged to be Printed in the Year MDXXV. New York: Abaris Books.
Euclid of Alexandria. 2003. Elements. Translated by Sir Thomas Little Heath and edited by Dana Densmore. Santa Fe, NM: Green Lion Press.
Eutocius of Ascalon. 1891. Commentary on Archimedes’ On The Sphere and the Cylinder. In Archimedis Opera omnia, cum commentariis Eutocii. E codice Florentino recensuit, edited by Johan Ludvig Heiberg, vol. 1. Leipzig: B. G. Tuebneri.
Eutocius of Escalon. 2004. Commentary on Archimedes’ On The Sphere and the Cylinder. In The Works of Archimedes: The Two Books On the Sphere and the Cylinder, edited by Reviel Netz, vol. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Eutocius of Ascalon. 2013. Commentary on Archimedes’ On The Sphere and the Cylinder. In Archimedis Opera omnia, cum commentariis Eutocii. E codice Florentino recensuit, edited by Johan Ludvig Heiberg, vol. 1. Leipzig: B. G. Tuebneri. Reprint; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Fried, Michael N., and Sabetai Unguru. 2001. Apollonius of Perga’s Conica: Text, Context, Subtext. Leiden: Brill.
Ishizu, Hideko (石津秀子). 2009. Another solution to the polyhedron in Dürer’s Melencolia: A visual demonstration of the Delian problem. Aesthetics (13):179–194.
Joyce, David E., ed. 1996–1998. Euclid’s Elements. http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/java/elements/elements.html.
Knorr, Wilbur Richard. 1989. Textual Studies in Ancient and Medieval Geometry. Boston: Birkhaüser.
Knorr, Wilbur Richard. 1993. The Ancient Tradition of Geometric Problems. New York: Dover.
Kouremenos, Theokritos. 2011. The tradition of the Delian problem and its origins in the Platonic corpus. Trends in Classics 3:341–364.
Liddell, Henry George, and Robert Scott. 1940. Greek-English Lexicon. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Marsden, E. W. 1971. Greek and Roman Artillery: Technical Treatises. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
McKinney, Colin B. P. 2010. Conjugate Diameters: Apollonius of Perga and Eutocius of Escalon. PhD diss., University of Iowa.
Pantelia, Maria, dir. 2014. Thesaurus Linguae Graecae.
Saito, Ken (斎藤憲). 1995. Doubling the Cube: A New Interpretation of Its Significance for Early Greek Geometry. Historia Mathematica 22:119–137.
Stoudt, Gary S. 2015. Can You Really Derive Conic Formulae from a Cone? Convergence 12.
Thomas, Ivor, ed. 1939a. Greek Mathematical Works, Volume 1: Thales to Euclid. Loeb Classical Library, no. 335. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Thomas, Ivor, ed. 1939b. Greek Mathematical Works, Volume 2: Aristarchus to Pappus. Loeb Classical Library, no. 362. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.