Sophus Lie and Felix Klein: The Erlangen Program and Its Impact in Mathematics and Physics

10.4171/148 ◽  
2015 ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 359-367 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gereon Wolters

Hugo Dingler lived from 1881 to 1954. During the academic years 1901–2 and 1903–4 he studied mathematics and physics at the University of Munich. He spent the intervening year (and then the summer of 1906) in Göttingen, where he studied mathematics with David Hilbert and Felix Klein as well as – for the first time – philosophy (with Edmund Husserl). In 1907 Dingler completed his doctorate in Munich with Aurel Voss with a dissertation on general surface deformation. His Habilitation followed in 1912, also at the University of Munich, but only for the prospectless field of “Method, Didactics and History of Mathematical Sciences.”


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matheus Pereira Lobo

The purpose of this paper is to introduce a new type of microarticle, considered for publishing in the Open Journal of Mathematics and Physics (OJMP), dubbed "Mathematical Insight."


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Rosenberg

Abstract Paul Valéry’s interest in the life sciences is an important yet little-studied aspect of his work. Although Valéry was known primarily as a reader of mathematics and physics, his fascination with the life sciences has often been ignored or regarded as mere curiosity. This article examines Valéry’s writing on the subject of biology by focusing on the unique status he accords to the notion of life. In both his theoretical and poetic writings, Valéry addresses the notion of life as a category endowed with distinct ontological attributes — as a phenomenon that encompasses a distinct type of order. Life, as an independent force, is capable of resisting and even reversing the principle of entropy, which Valéry regards as a universal tendency towards degradation and dispersion that affects all inanimate matter. Valéry’s thought thus exhibits a complicated yet clear affinity with the intellectual tradition known as vitalism. The article discusses this affinity by analysing the presence of vitalist ideas and imagery in Valéry’s corpus, giving special attention to his most expressly ‘biological’ work, the essay ‘L’Homme et la coquille’ (‘The Man and the Seashell’).


2021 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 15-17
Author(s):  
Don Monroe

A theorem about computations that exploit quantum mechanics challenges longstanding ideas in mathematics and physics.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document