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Grete Hermann

Grete Hermann (2 March 1901 – 15 April 1984)[1] was a German mathematician and philosopher noted for her work in mathematics, physics, philosophy and education. She is noted for her early philosophical work on the foundations of quantum mechanics, and is now known most of all for an early, but long-ignored critique of a "no hidden-variables theorem" by John von Neumann. It has been suggested that, had her critique not remained nearly unknown for decades, the historical development of quantum mechanics might have been very different.[2]

Grete Hermann
Grete Hermann
Born(1901-03-02)2 March 1901
Died15 April 1984(1984-04-15) (aged 83)
Bremen, West Germany
NationalityGerman
EducationUniversity of Göttingen (PhD, 1926, adv. Emmy Noether)
Occupation(s)Mathematician and philosopher
Employer(s)Assistant for Leonard Nelson; professor for philosophy and physics at the Pädagogische Hochschule in Bremen

Mathematics edit

Hermann studied mathematics at Göttingen under Emmy Noether and Edmund Landau,[3] where she achieved her PhD in 1926. Her doctoral thesis, "Die Frage der endlich vielen Schritte in der Theorie der Polynomideale" (in English "The Question of Finitely Many Steps in Polynomial Ideal Theory"), published in Mathematische Annalen, is the foundational paper for modern computer algebra. It first established the existence of algorithms (including complexity bounds) for many of the basic problems of abstract algebra, such as ideal membership for polynomial rings. Hermann's algorithm for primary decomposition is still in contemporary use.[4]

Assistant to Leonard Nelson edit

From 1925 to 1927, Hermann worked as assistant for Leonard Nelson.[1] Together with Minna Specht, she posthumously published Nelson's work System der philosophischen Ethik und Pädagogik,[5] while continuing her own research.

Quantum mechanics edit

As a philosopher, Hermann had a particular interest in the foundations of physics. In 1934, she went to Leipzig "for the express purpose of reconciling a neo-Kantian conception of causality with the new quantum mechanics".[6] In Leipzig, many exchanges of thoughts took place among Hermann, Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker, and Werner Heisenberg.[6] The contents of her work in this time, including a focus on a distinction of predictability and causality, are known from three of her own publications,[1] and from later description of their discussions by von Weizsäcker,[7] and the discussion of Hermann's work in chapter ten of Heisenberg's The Part and The Whole. From Denmark, she published her work The foundations of quantum mechanics in the philosophy of nature (German original title: Die naturphilosophischen Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik). This work has been referred to as "one of the earliest and best philosophical treatments of the new quantum mechanics".[8] In this work, she concludes:

The theory of quantum mechanics forces us […] to drop the assumption of the absolute character of knowledge about nature, and to deal with the principle of causality independently of this assumption. Quantum mechanics has therefore not contradicted the law of causality at all, but has clarified it and has removed from it other principles which are not necessarily connected to it.

— Grete Hermann, The foundations of quantum mechanics in the philosophy of nature[9]

In June 1936, Hermann was awarded the Richard Avenarius prize together with Eduard May and Th. Vogel.[10][11]

Earlier, in 1935, Hermann published a critique of John von Neumann's 1932 proof that was widely claimed to show that a hidden variable theory of quantum mechanics was impossible. Hermann's work on this subject went unnoticed by the physics community until it was independently discovered and published by John Stewart Bell in 1966, and her earlier discovery was pointed out by Max Jammer in 1974. Some have posited that had her critique not remained nearly unknown for decades, her ideas would have put in question the unequivocal acceptance of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, by providing a credible basis for the further development of nonlocal hidden variable theories, which would have changed the historical development of quantum mechanics.[1]

Political activism edit

As Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany, Hermann participated in the underground movement against the Nazis. She was a member of the Internationaler Sozialistischer Kampfbund (ISK).[12]

Emigration and later years edit

By 1936, Hermann left Germany for Denmark and later France and England.[12] In London, in order to avoid standing out on account of her German provenance, she married a man called Edward Henry early in 1938.[13] Her prescience was justified by events: two years later the British government invoked its hitherto obscure Regulation 18B of the Defence (General) Regulations 1939, identifying several thousand refugees who had fled Germany for reasons of politics or race as enemy aliens and placing them in internment camps.[14]

After the war ended in 1945 she was able to combine her interests in physics and mathematics with political philosophy. She rejoined the Social Democratic Party (SPD) on returning in 1946 to what would become, in 1949, the German Federal Republic (West Germany).[15] Starting in 1947 she was one of those contributing behind the scenes to the Bad Godesberg Programme, prepared under the leadership of her longstanding ISK comrade Willi Eichler, and issued in 1959, which provided a detailed modernising platform that carried the party into government in the 1960s.[15]

She was nominated professor for philosophy and physics at the Pädagogische Hochschule in Bremen and played a relevant role in the Gewerkschaft Erziehung und Wissenschaft. From 1961 to 1978, she presided over the Philosophisch-Politische Akademie, an organisation founded by Nelson in 1922, oriented towards education, social justice, responsible political action and its philosophical basis.[12][16]

Works edit

Articles
  • Grete Hermann: Die naturphilosophischen Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik, Naturwissenschaften, Volume 23, Number 42, 718–721, doi:10.1007/BF01491142 (preview in German language)
  • Grete Hermann: Die Frage der endlich vielen Schritte in der Theorie der Polynomideale. Unter Benutzung nachgelassener Sätze von K. Hentzelt, Mathematische Annalen, Volume 95, Number 1, 736–788, doi:10.1007/BF01206635 (abstract in German language) — The question of finitely many steps in polynomial ideal theory (review and English-language translation)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Soler, Léna (2009). "The Convergence of Transcendental Philosophy and Quantum Physics: Grete Henry-Hermann's 1935 Pioneering Proposal". In M. Bitbol; P. Kerszberg; J. Petitot (eds.). Constituting Objectivity. The Western Ontario Series in Philosophy of Science. Vol. 74. Springer. pp. 329–344. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-9510-8_20. ISBN 978-1-4020-9509-2.
  2. ^ Lee Smolin Public Lecture Special: Einstein's Unfinished Revolution, event occurs at 1:11:31, retrieved 12 November 2023
  3. ^ "Margarethe Hermann - The Mathematics Genealogy Project". www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
  4. ^ Ciliberto, Ciro; Hirzebruch, Friedrich; Miranda, Rick; Teicher, Mina, eds. (2001). Applications of Algebraic Geometry to Coding Theory, Physics and Computation. Nato Science Series II. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands. ISBN 978-94-010-1011-5.
  5. ^ Minna Specht 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Philosophisch-Politische Akademie (in German language), doanloaded 22 January 2012
  6. ^ a b Bacciagaluppi, Guido; Crull, Elise (December 2009). "Heisenberg (and Schrödinger, and Pauli) on hidden variables". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B. 40 (4): 374–382. Bibcode:2009SHPMP..40..374B. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.484.3421. doi:10.1016/j.shpsb.2009.08.004. S2CID 13140289. PhilSci:4759.
  7. ^ Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker, see for example: Jagdish Mehra, Helmut Rechenberg: The Historical Development of Quantum Theory, Volume 6 The Completion of Quantum Mechanics 1926–1941, Part 2, Springer, 2001, ISBN 0-387-95086-9, p. 712 f.
  8. ^ Crull, Elise; Bacciagaluppi, Guido (2021). "Translation of: W. Heisenberg, "Ist eine deterministische Ergänzung der Quantenmechanik möglich?". The Einstein Paradox: The Debate on Nonlocality and Incompleteness in 1935. Cambridge University Press. PhilSci:8590.
  9. ^ Grete Hermann: The foundations of quantum mechanics in the philosophy of nature. Cited after its translation from German with an introduction by Dirk Lumma in The Harvard Review of Philosophy VII (1999), p. 35 ff.
  10. ^ C. F. Freiherr v. Weizsäcker (interviewed), Konrad Lindner: Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker über sein Studium in Leipzig, NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 3-18, doi:10.1007/BF02914089, see fulltext
  11. ^ V. F. Lenzen: Die Bedeutung der Modernen Physik für die Theorie der Erkenntnis. Drei mit dem Richard Avenarius-Preis ausgezeichnete Arbeiten von Dr. Grete Hermann, Dr. E. May, Dr. Th. Vogel, In A. P. Ushenko (ed.): The Philosophy of Relativity, Science, vol. 85, no. 2217 (25 June 1937), pp. 606-607
  12. ^ a b c Grete Henry-Hermann, Friedrich Ebert Foundation, downloaded 22 January 2012
  13. ^ "Marriage registry index (Marylebone)". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 15 February 2016.
  14. ^ Patricia Shipley; who is "grateful to Fernando Leal, Rene Saran, and Dieter Krohn for their helpful comments in the preparation of this account" (20 November 2012). "Grete Henry - Hermann (1901-1984) (A personal account for the trustees of the SFCP)". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ a b Andrea Abele; Helmut Neunzert; Renate Tobies (2004). Berufswege promovierter Mathematikerinnen und Mathematiker. Springer Basel AG. pp. 110–111. ISBN 978-3-7643-6749-7. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  16. ^ Philosophisch-Politische Akademie (in German language), downloaded 22 January 2012

Further reading edit

  • C. Herzenberg: Grete Hermann: Mathematician, Physicist, Philosopher, Bulletin of the American Physical Society, 2008 APS April Meeting and HEDP/HEDLA Meeting, Volume 53, Number 5, 11–15 April 2008 in St. Louis, Missouri (abstract)
  • Vera Venz: Zur Biografie von Grete Hermann, GRIN 2009, First edition 2001, ISBN 978-3640411924 (in German language)

External links edit

  • Grete Hermann at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • Grete Henry's "The Significance of Behaviour Study for the Critique of Reason," Ratio, Volume XV, No. 2, December 1973 at the Friesian School
  • Grete Henry-Hermann: Politically minded scientist by F. Kersting (German language version, exhibition catalog ISBN 978-3-939928-60-7)
  • Grete Hermann: Mathematician, Philosopher and Physicist by Giulia Paparo (MA Thesis) at Academia.edu [accessible with free registration]

grete, hermann, march, 1901, april, 1984, german, mathematician, philosopher, noted, work, mathematics, physics, philosophy, education, noted, early, philosophical, work, foundations, quantum, mechanics, known, most, early, long, ignored, critique, hidden, var. Grete Hermann 2 March 1901 15 April 1984 1 was a German mathematician and philosopher noted for her work in mathematics physics philosophy and education She is noted for her early philosophical work on the foundations of quantum mechanics and is now known most of all for an early but long ignored critique of a no hidden variables theorem by John von Neumann It has been suggested that had her critique not remained nearly unknown for decades the historical development of quantum mechanics might have been very different 2 Grete HermannGrete HermannBorn 1901 03 02 2 March 1901Bremen German EmpireDied15 April 1984 1984 04 15 aged 83 Bremen West GermanyNationalityGermanEducationUniversity of Gottingen PhD 1926 adv Emmy Noether Occupation s Mathematician and philosopherEmployer s Assistant for Leonard Nelson professor for philosophy and physics at the Padagogische Hochschule in Bremen Contents 1 Mathematics 2 Assistant to Leonard Nelson 3 Quantum mechanics 4 Political activism 5 Emigration and later years 6 Works 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksMathematics editHermann studied mathematics at Gottingen under Emmy Noether and Edmund Landau 3 where she achieved her PhD in 1926 Her doctoral thesis Die Frage der endlich vielen Schritte in der Theorie der Polynomideale in English The Question of Finitely Many Steps in Polynomial Ideal Theory published in Mathematische Annalen is the foundational paper for modern computer algebra It first established the existence of algorithms including complexity bounds for many of the basic problems of abstract algebra such as ideal membership for polynomial rings Hermann s algorithm for primary decomposition is still in contemporary use 4 Assistant to Leonard Nelson editFrom 1925 to 1927 Hermann worked as assistant for Leonard Nelson 1 Together with Minna Specht she posthumously published Nelson s work System der philosophischen Ethik und Padagogik 5 while continuing her own research Quantum mechanics editAs a philosopher Hermann had a particular interest in the foundations of physics In 1934 she went to Leipzig for the express purpose of reconciling a neo Kantian conception of causality with the new quantum mechanics 6 In Leipzig many exchanges of thoughts took place among Hermann Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker and Werner Heisenberg 6 The contents of her work in this time including a focus on a distinction of predictability and causality are known from three of her own publications 1 and from later description of their discussions by von Weizsacker 7 and the discussion of Hermann s work in chapter ten of Heisenberg s The Part and The Whole From Denmark she published her work The foundations of quantum mechanics in the philosophy of nature German original title Die naturphilosophischen Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik This work has been referred to as one of the earliest and best philosophical treatments of the new quantum mechanics 8 In this work she concludes The theory of quantum mechanics forces us to drop the assumption of the absolute character of knowledge about nature and to deal with the principle of causality independently of this assumption Quantum mechanics has therefore not contradicted the law of causality at all but has clarified it and has removed from it other principles which are not necessarily connected to it Grete Hermann The foundations of quantum mechanics in the philosophy of nature 9 In June 1936 Hermann was awarded the Richard Avenarius prize together with Eduard May and Th Vogel 10 11 Earlier in 1935 Hermann published a critique of John von Neumann s 1932 proof that was widely claimed to show that a hidden variable theory of quantum mechanics was impossible Hermann s work on this subject went unnoticed by the physics community until it was independently discovered and published by John Stewart Bell in 1966 and her earlier discovery was pointed out by Max Jammer in 1974 Some have posited that had her critique not remained nearly unknown for decades her ideas would have put in question the unequivocal acceptance of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics by providing a credible basis for the further development of nonlocal hidden variable theories which would have changed the historical development of quantum mechanics 1 Political activism editAs Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany Hermann participated in the underground movement against the Nazis She was a member of the Internationaler Sozialistischer Kampfbund ISK 12 Emigration and later years editBy 1936 Hermann left Germany for Denmark and later France and England 12 In London in order to avoid standing out on account of her German provenance she married a man called Edward Henry early in 1938 13 Her prescience was justified by events two years later the British government invoked its hitherto obscure Regulation 18B of the Defence General Regulations 1939 identifying several thousand refugees who had fled Germany for reasons of politics or race as enemy aliens and placing them in internment camps 14 After the war ended in 1945 she was able to combine her interests in physics and mathematics with political philosophy She rejoined the Social Democratic Party SPD on returning in 1946 to what would become in 1949 the German Federal Republic West Germany 15 Starting in 1947 she was one of those contributing behind the scenes to the Bad Godesberg Programme prepared under the leadership of her longstanding ISK comrade Willi Eichler and issued in 1959 which provided a detailed modernising platform that carried the party into government in the 1960s 15 She was nominated professor for philosophy and physics at the Padagogische Hochschule in Bremen and played a relevant role in the Gewerkschaft Erziehung und Wissenschaft From 1961 to 1978 she presided over the Philosophisch Politische Akademie an organisation founded by Nelson in 1922 oriented towards education social justice responsible political action and its philosophical basis 12 16 Works editArticles Grete Hermann Die naturphilosophischen Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik Naturwissenschaften Volume 23 Number 42 718 721 doi 10 1007 BF01491142 preview in German language Grete Hermann Die Frage der endlich vielen Schritte in der Theorie der Polynomideale Unter Benutzung nachgelassener Satze von K Hentzelt Mathematische Annalen Volume 95 Number 1 736 788 doi 10 1007 BF01206635 abstract in German language The question of finitely many steps in polynomial ideal theory review and English language translation References edit a b c d Soler Lena 2009 The Convergence of Transcendental Philosophy and Quantum Physics Grete Henry Hermann s 1935 Pioneering Proposal In M Bitbol P Kerszberg J Petitot eds Constituting Objectivity The Western Ontario Series in Philosophy of Science Vol 74 Springer pp 329 344 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 9510 8 20 ISBN 978 1 4020 9509 2 Lee Smolin Public Lecture Special Einstein s Unfinished Revolution event occurs at 1 11 31 retrieved 12 November 2023 Margarethe Hermann The Mathematics Genealogy Project www genealogy math ndsu nodak edu Retrieved 29 May 2019 Ciliberto Ciro Hirzebruch Friedrich Miranda Rick Teicher Mina eds 2001 Applications of Algebraic Geometry to Coding Theory Physics and Computation Nato Science Series II Dordrecht Springer Netherlands ISBN 978 94 010 1011 5 Minna Specht Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Philosophisch Politische Akademie in German language doanloaded 22 January 2012 a b Bacciagaluppi Guido Crull Elise December 2009 Heisenberg and Schrodinger and Pauli on hidden variables Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B 40 4 374 382 Bibcode 2009SHPMP 40 374B CiteSeerX 10 1 1 484 3421 doi 10 1016 j shpsb 2009 08 004 S2CID 13140289 PhilSci 4759 Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker see for example Jagdish Mehra Helmut Rechenberg The Historical Development of Quantum Theory Volume 6 The Completion of Quantum Mechanics 1926 1941 Part 2 Springer 2001 ISBN 0 387 95086 9 p 712 f Crull Elise Bacciagaluppi Guido 2021 Translation of W Heisenberg Ist eine deterministische Erganzung der Quantenmechanik moglich The Einstein Paradox The Debate on Nonlocality and Incompleteness in 1935 Cambridge University Press PhilSci 8590 Grete Hermann The foundations of quantum mechanics in the philosophy of nature Cited after its translation from German with an introduction by Dirk Lumma in The Harvard Review of Philosophy VII 1999 p 35 ff C F Freiherr v Weizsacker interviewed Konrad Lindner Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker uber sein Studium in Leipzig NTM Zeitschrift fur Geschichte der Wissenschaften Technik und Medizin vol 1 no 1 pp 3 18 doi 10 1007 BF02914089 see fulltext V F Lenzen Die Bedeutung der Modernen Physik fur die Theorie der Erkenntnis Drei mit dem Richard Avenarius Preis ausgezeichnete Arbeiten von Dr Grete Hermann Dr E May Dr Th Vogel In A P Ushenko ed The Philosophy of Relativity Science vol 85 no 2217 25 June 1937 pp 606 607 a b c Grete Henry Hermann Friedrich Ebert Foundation downloaded 22 January 2012 Marriage registry index Marylebone FreeBMD ONS Retrieved 15 February 2016 Patricia Shipley who is grateful to Fernando Leal Rene Saran and Dieter Krohn for their helpful comments in the preparation of this account 20 November 2012 Grete Henry Hermann 1901 1984 A personal account for the trustees of the SFCP a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Andrea Abele Helmut Neunzert Renate Tobies 2004 Berufswege promovierter Mathematikerinnen und Mathematiker Springer Basel AG pp 110 111 ISBN 978 3 7643 6749 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Philosophisch Politische Akademie in German language downloaded 22 January 2012 This article incorporates material from Grete Hermann on PlanetMath which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike License Further reading editC Herzenberg Grete Hermann Mathematician Physicist Philosopher Bulletin of the American Physical Society 2008 APS April Meeting and HEDP HEDLA Meeting Volume 53 Number 5 11 15 April 2008 in St Louis Missouri abstract Vera Venz Zur Biografie von Grete Hermann GRIN 2009 First edition 2001 ISBN 978 3640411924 in German language External links editGrete Hermann at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Grete Henry s The Significance of Behaviour Study for the Critique of Reason Ratio Volume XV No 2 December 1973 at the Friesian School Grete Henry Hermann Politically minded scientist by F Kersting German language version exhibition catalog ISBN 978 3 939928 60 7 Grete Hermann Mathematician Philosopher and Physicist by Giulia Paparo MA Thesis at Academia edu accessible with free registration Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grete Hermann amp oldid 1222001775, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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