If three conics pass through two given points and
, then the lines joining the other two intersections of each
pair of conics
are concurrent at a point
(Evelyn 1974, p. 15). The converse states that if two
conics
and
meet at four points
,
,
,
and
,
and if
and
are chords of
and
,
respectively, which meet on
, then the six points lie on a conic. The dual of the
theorem states that if three conics share two common tangents, then their remaining
pairs of common tangents intersect at three collinear
points.
If the points
and
are taken as the points at infinity, then the
theorem reduces to the theorem that radical lines
of three circles are concurrent
in a point known as the radical center (Evelyn
1974, p. 15).
If two of the points and
are taken as the points
at infinity, then the theorem becomes that if two circles
and
pass through two points
and
on a conic
, then the lines determined by the pair of intersections of
each circle with the conic are parallel (Evelyn 1974, p. 15).