Erich Justus Kretschmann (14 July 1887 – 1973) was a German
physicist.
[ (Gebhardt gives a list of Kretschmann's publications.)]
Life
Kretschmann was born in
Berlin. He obtained his PhD at
Berlin University in 1914 with his dissertation entitled "''Eine Theorie der Schwerkraft im Rahmen der ursprünglichen Einsteinschen Relativitätstheorie''" (A theory of gravity in the framework of the original Einstein theory of relativity). His advisors were
Max Planck and
Heinrich Rubens
Heinrich Rubens (30 March 1865, Wiesbaden, Nassau, Germany – 17 July 1922, Berlin, Germany) was a German physicist. He is known for his measurements of the energy of black-body radiation which led Max Planck to the discovery of his radiati ...
. After working as a
Gymnasium (school)
''Gymnasium'' (and variations of the word) is a term in various European languages for a secondary school that prepares students for higher education at a university. It is comparable to the US English term '' preparatory high school''. Bef ...
teacher, he became
Privatdozent
''Privatdozent'' (for men) or ''Privatdozentin'' (for women), abbreviated PD, P.D. or Priv.-Doz., is an academic title conferred at some European universities, especially in German-speaking countries, to someone who holds certain formal qualific ...
for
theoretical physics at the
University of Königsberg in 1920, where he eventually became
professor extraordinarius in 1926. From 1946 until 1952, Kretschmann was professor for theoretical physics and director of the institute for theoretical physics at the
University of Halle-Wittenberg.
Work
In his 1915 papers, he introduced the
Kretschmann scalar. In his 1915 papers he also introduced, though not in name, the
point coincidence argument In general relativity, the hole argument is an apparent paradox that much troubled Albert Einstein while developing his famous field equations.
Some philosophers of physics take the argument to raise a problem for ''manifold substantialism'', a ...
in relativity. Similar ideas appeared in Einstein's writings on
general relativity. Historians Don Howard and
John D. Norton
John Daniel Norton (born 1953) is an Australian philosopher of physics and distinguished professor of the history and philosophy of science at the University of Pittsburgh.
Biography
He had originally studied chemical engineering at the Univers ...
suggest that Einstein may have failed to adequately acknowledge Kretschmann's contribution. Kretschmann's use of the argument was more topological while Einstein's use involved physical measurements.
Kretschmann is most famous for his 1917 claim that Einstein's use of the
principle of covariance in General Relativity is vacuous. Kretschmann claimed that the demand that a theory be put in
generally covariant form does not limit or restrict the range of acceptable theories, but is simply a challenge to the mathematician's ingenuity. According to Kretschmann, any theory can be put in generally covariant form. Einstein responded that even if general covariance is not a purely formal limitation on acceptable theories, it plays "an important heuristic role" in the formulation of General Relativity.
Einstein wrote concerning Kretschmann's objection: "Although it is true that every empirical law can be put in a generally covariant form, yet the principle of relativity possesses a great heuristic power....Of two theoretical systems, both of which agree with experience, the one is to be preferred which, from the point of view of the absolute differential calculus is the simpler and more transparent. Let one express Newtonian mechanics four-dimensionally in the form of generally covariant equations and one will surely be convinced that the principle of relativity excludes this theory from the practical, though not the theoretical, viewpoint." (Einstein, Albert, 1918. "Principielles zur allgemeinen Relativitätstheorie," ''
Annalen der Physik'', vol. 55, esp. p. 242)
Einstein suggested that Newtonian theory would be impossibly complex if put in covariant form, although since Einstein made that claim it has been formulated in covariant form by several physicists, including
Élie Cartan in 1923 and
Kurt Otto Friedrichs in 1927.
Charles W. Misner,
Kip Thorne, and
John Archibald Wheeler, in their textbook ''
Gravitation
In physics, gravity () is a fundamental interaction which causes mutual attraction between all things with mass or energy. Gravity is, by far, the weakest of the four fundamental interactions, approximately 1038 times weaker than the stron ...
'' (1973) Ch. 12 present the covariant version of Newtonian theory.
In a letter of 1927 to Karl Försterling
Arnold Sommerfeld
Arnold Johannes Wilhelm Sommerfeld, (; 5 December 1868 – 26 April 1951) was a German theoretical physicist who pioneered developments in atomic and quantum physics, and also educated and mentored many students for the new era of theoretica ...
wrote favorably of Kretschmann's work in relativity and the statistics of electrons, but said that he needed to get a different teaching position (get away from Königsberg) in order to be able to do more research.
The issue of whether covariance is a real restriction and if so in what sense appears in various contributions to the philosophical debate concerning Einstein's "
hole argument." This argument initially had led Einstein in 1913 for a time to reject generally covariant theories, because a region of space/time without forces would undermine determinism or unique extension of trajectories. He later concluded that space/time points without gravity would not be individuated.
It has been claimed also that Kretschmann discovered that the conformal geometry of General Relativity corresponds to the light cone structure, a point rediscovered by and extensively exploited by
Hermann Weyl
Hermann Klaus Hugo Weyl, (; 9 November 1885 – 8 December 1955) was a German mathematician, theoretical physicist and philosopher. Although much of his working life was spent in Zürich, Switzerland, and then Princeton, New Jersey, he is assoc ...
, and since then developed by Jürgen Ehlers and collaborators.
Kretschmann's prose is so convoluted and obscure that reception and appreciation of his work was generally delayed. James L. Anderson in the mid-1960s made Kretschmann's work more well-known, though he used it as an object of criticism with respect to Kretschmann's claims concerning the symmetry groups of special and general relativity.
Kretschmann published half a dozen less noted papers during the 1920s and early 1930s, the last two in 1934, though he continued to live in Germany for decades.
[
His 1934 paper ''Beitrag zur Kritik der Blochschen Theorie der Elektrizitätsleitung'', although it has only 17 citations as of the end of the year 2021, might be of some historical interest. According to Rudolf Peierls:][ (quote from p. 34)]
Major works
* Kretschmann, Erich. 1915. ''Über die prinzipielle Bestimmbarkeit der berechtigten Bezugssysteme beliebiger Relativitätstheorien (I), (II)''. Annalen der Physik 48: 907–942, 943–982
Teil I
Teil II
* Kretschmann, Erich. 1917
''Über den physikalischen Sinn der Relativitätspostulate. A. Einsteins neue und seine ursprüngliche Relativitätstheorie''
Annalen der Physik 53: 575–614.
Notes
References
Janssen, Michel, "Einstein’s First Systematic Exposition of General Relativity," on philsci-archive.pitt.edu
Norton, John D., "General Covariance and the Foundations of General Relativity: Eight Decades of Dispute," Rep. Progr. Theor. Phys., Vol. 56, 1993, 751-856.
Don Howard and John D. Norton, "Out of the Labyrinth? Einstein, Hertz, and the Göttingen Response to the Hole Argument," in John Earman, Michel Janssen, and John D. Norton, eds., ''The Attraction of Gravitation: New Studies in the History of General Relativity'', Boston: Birkhãuser, 1993, 30-62.
Further reading
* Robert Rynasiewicz
"Kretschmann's Analysis of Covariance and Relativity Principles," in Hubert Goeener et al., eds., ''The Expanding Worlds of General Relativity'', Boston: Birkhãuser, 1999, 431-462.
* Marco Giovanelli
''Erich Kretschmann as a Proto-Logical-Empiricist: Adventures and Misadventures of the Point-Coincidence Argument''. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics Volume 44, Issue 2, 115–134.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kretschmann, Erich
1887 births
1973 deaths
20th-century German physicists
Academic staff of the University of Wittenberg
Academic staff of the University of Königsberg
Scientists from Berlin