A store of information may be derived from Bertrand A. W. Russell's essay on the Foundations of Geometry. He divides the history of metageometry into three periods: The synthetic, consisting of suggestions made by Legendre and Gauss; the metrical, inaugurated by Riemann and characterized by Lobatchevsky and Bolyai; and the projective, represented by Cayley and Klein, who reduce metrical properties to projection and thus show that Euclidean and non-Euclidean systems may result from "the absolute."<!--p.26-->
''the foundations of mathematics'' (1908)