Abstract

In last century, the historians of physics improved their historical accounts till up to obtain be interpretative accounts. The two main interpretative accounts have posed fundamental problems. Koyré: whether in theoretical physics mathematics is also idealistic in nature; Kuhn: whether and how the notions of paradigm, anomaly, crisis, scientific revolution and incommensurability are essential for a deep understanding of the history of physics. For their part, the philosophers of science have suggested a program for unifying the entire science; hence, they attributed to the concept of reduction between two theories insisting on the same field of phenomena a crucial role. A great debate tried to define this notion of reduction. Since longtime a particular, but more accurate notion of reduction has been applied by physicists: the reduction through a limit of a fundamental parameter of the reducing theory. But Berry, Rohrlich and Batterman pointed out that this reduction is impossible when the limit is singular, as it occurs in the cases of physical optics and geometric optics, statistical mechanics and thermodynamics, quantum mechanics and classical mechanics, etc. Hence, to represent an entire theory as the final point of a singular limit operation applies idealistic mathematics more than what was suggested by Koyré, i.e. to represent a physical law through an idealistic mathematical notion. In addition, a new mathematics—the constructive one—characterizes a singular limit as undecidable. Hence, a singular limit between two theories actually represents a difference between two different kinds of mathematics. This particular situation suggests a mathematical definition of the notion of incommensurability. As a consequence of the resulting incommensurability among many couples of theories the foundations of physical theories are pluralist, not only in both epistemological and ontological senses, but also in a mathematical sense. Hence, the traditional vision of the historical growth of theoretical physics as a series of theories as concentric circles, each theory being compatible with the previous ones is denied; since longtime the history of physics is developing along a plurilinear path.

Highlights

  • In 20th Century on one hand historians of physics began to interpret their historical subjects by using philosophical categories, and on another hand philosophers of physics began to formally interpret scientific theories

  • Koyré: whether in theoretical physics mathematics is idealistic in nature; Kuhn: whether and how the notions of paradigm, anomaly, crisis, scientific revolution and incommensurability are essential for a deep understanding of the history of physics

  • There exist several physical theories—Lazare Carnot’s mechanics, Sadi Carnot-Kelvin-Clausius thermodynamics, first Einstein’s quantum theory, Heisenberg’s first formulation of quantum mechanics—that have been built without making use of idealistic notions, i.e. these authors only made use of constructive mathematics relying on only potential infinity

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Summary

Introduction

In 20th Century on one hand historians of physics began to interpret their historical subjects by using philosophical categories, and on another hand philosophers of physics began to formally (i.e. logically) interpret scientific theories. I will examine how the past philosophers of physics encountered and discussed the problem of how to define a reduction between two theories insisting on the same field of phenomena. This concept is of great importance because a suitable definition of it can link all theories into a chain or a network. 7 I will present the most important case-studies of couples of physical theories commonly considered as connected by an limit reduction; almost all of limits result singular limits. I suggest to renew physics teaching about both the usual limit reductions which can no longer be presented as assured results and the history of physics which can no longer be presented as a unilinear path or tending to a unity

The “New Historiography of Physics”
Philosophers of Physics
Drago DOI
A Quick Historical Review of the Clamed Reductions between Physical Theories
The Philosophical Debate on the Definition of Reduction between Two Theories
Instances of Singular Limits in Cases of Claimed Reduction
Wave Optics and Geometric Optics
Statistical Mechanics and Thermodynamics
Special Relativity and Classical Mechanics
Classical Mechanics and Quantum Mechanics
General Relativity and Classical Mechanics
Other Problems
Which Lessons from the Reduction through a Singular Limit?
Theoretical Physics and Idealizations
The Constructive Mathematics
Constructive Mathematics and Physical Theories
Constructive Mathematics and Inter-Theoretic Reduction
10.1. Koyré was Right
10.2. A Mathematical Definition of Incommensurability
10.3. The Rarity of Reductions of Entire Theories
10.4. Devaluation of the Program of Unifying All Theories
10.5. New Interpretation of the History of Physics
11. Conclusion
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