The Cambridge Companion to Einstein

Höfundur Michel Janssen et al

Útgefandi Cambridge University Press

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Print ISBN 9780521828345

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4.590 kr.

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Efnisyfirlit

  • Half-title
  • Frontispiece
  • Series information
  • Title page
  • Copyright information
  • Dedication
  • Table of contents
  • List of contributors
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Notes
  • 1 Einstein’s Copernican Revolution
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Einstein as a Disciple of Boltzmann, Planck, and Lorentz
  • 3. The Origins of Einstein’s New Perspective
  • 4. Speculative Alternatives to Classical Physics
  • 5. Statistical Mechanics as a Bridge between Classical and Modern Physics
  • 6. The Reinterpretation of Classical Physics
  • 6.1. The Light Quantum Hypothesis
  • 6.2. Brownian Motion
  • 6.3. Special Relativity
  • Notes
  • 2 Einstein’s Special Theory of Relativity and the Problems in the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Basic Notions
  • 2.1. Einstein’s Postulates
  • 2.2. Relativity of Simultaneity
  • 2.3. Kinematics of Special Relativity
  • 3. Lorentz’s Theorem of Corresponding States
  • 3.1. Failing to See the Ether Wind
  • 3.2. A Challenging Problem in Electrodynamics
  • 3.3. The Theorem
  • 4. Einstein’s Path to Special Relativity
  • 4.1. The Magnet and Conductor Thought Experiment
  • 4.2. Field Transformations and the Relativity of Simultaneity
  • 4.3. Einstein Considers an Emission Theory of Light
  • 4.4. Return to Maxwell’s Theory
  • 4.5. Stellar Aberration
  • 5. E = mc2
  • 5.1. The Result
  • 5.2. A Demonstration
  • 6. Conclusion
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • 3 Einstein on Statistical Physics: Fluctuations and Atomism
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. The First Two Papers: 1901–1902
  • 3. The Year 1905
  • 4. Foundations of Statistical Physics, 1902–1904
  • 5. Critical Opalescence
  • Notes
  • 4 The Quantum Enigma
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Max Planck on Black-Body Radiation
  • 3. Einstein’s Statistical Mechanics
  • 4. The Revolution of 1905
  • 5. Quantized Oscillators
  • 6. Conversions to the Quantum
  • 7. Waves and Corpuscles
  • 8. Three Years of Skepticism
  • 9. Back to the Quanta
  • 10. Crucial Experiments
  • 11. Quantum Degeneracy and Matter Waves
  • 12. Conclusion: Einstein and Quantum Mechanics
  • Notes
  • 5 The Experimental Challenge of Light Quanta
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. The Photoelectric Effect and Beyond
  • 3. Classical Theories of the Photoelectric Effect
  • 4. Millikan’s Experiments and Theory
  • 5. The Compton Effect
  • 6. The Bohr-Kramers-Slater Theory
  • Notes
  • 6 “No Success Like Failure …”: Einstein’s Quest for General Relativity, 1907–1920
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. First Attempt: The Equivalence Principle
  • 3. Second Attempt: General Covariance
  • 4. Third Attempt: A Machian Account of Newton’s Bucket
  • 5. Fourth Attempt: Mach’s Principle and Cosmological Constant
  • 6. PostMortem: How Einstein’s Physics Kept His Philosophy in Check
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • 7 Einstein’s Role in the Creation of Relativistic Cosmology
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. The Great Debate
  • 3. Relativistic Cosmology
  • 3.1. Paradoxes of Newtonian Cosmology
  • 3.2. Mach’s Principle
  • 4. Cosmological Models: A Versus B
  • 4.1. The Many Faces of Model B
  • 4.2. Singularities
  • 4.3. Redshift
  • 5. The Expanding Universe
  • 6. Conclusion
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • 8 Einstein, Gravitational Waves, and the Theoretician’s Regress
  • 9 Einstein’s Unified Field Theory Program
  • 1. The Conceptual Dimension
  • 2. The Representational Dimension
  • 3. The Biographical Dimension
  • 4. The Philosophical Dimension
  • Notes
  • 10 Einstein’s Realism and His Critique of Quantum Mechanics
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Einstein’s Realism
  • 3. Einstein’s Determinism
  • 4. The Rise of Quantum Mechanics
  • 5. The First Debates about Quantum Mechanics
  • 6. The Entanglement Argument
  • 7. Macroscopic Realism
  • 8. Epilogue: Einstein’s Dream Shattered?
  • 9. Why Einstein Did Not Like Quantum Mechanics
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • 11 Einstein and the Development of Twentieth-Century Philosophy of Science
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Background and Early Influences
  • 3. A New Empiricism as an Answer to the Neo-Kantians
  • 4. Not a “Machian,” But Not a “Realist” Either
  • 5. Conclusion
  • Notes
  • 12 “A Believing Rationalist”: Einstein and “the Truly Valuable” in Kant
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. What Did “the Problem of Gravitation” Teach?
  • 3. “The Truly Valuable” in Kant
  • 4. Einstein’s Kant
  • 5. Projecting the Order of Nature
  • 6. Conclusion
  • Notes
  • 13 Space, Time, and Geometry
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Einstein, Schlick, and Poincaré
  • 3. Einstein’s Introduction of Non-Euclidean Geometry and the Nineteenth-Century Tradition
  • 4. Morals for Twentieth-Century Philosophy of Geometry: From Space to Space-Time
  • Notes
  • 14 Einstein’s Politics
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Background and Youth: Making a Virtue of Necessity
  • 3. Crosscurrents of the Early Career
  • 4. Convergence with the World: Distilling Political Positions out of Moral Concerns
  • 5. Recovering Judaism: Einstein’s Version of Zionism
  • 6. Achieving Social Justice: The Social Democratic Solution
  • 7. The Flexible Pacifist
  • 8. Einstein in America: The Nonpartisan Champion of the Underdog
  • Notes
  • Appendix: Special Relativity
  • 1. The Relativity Postulate, the Light Postulate, and Their Strange Consequences
  • 1.1. The Two Postulates of Special Relativity and the Tension between Them
  • 1.2. The Relativity of Simultaneity
  • 1.3. Time Dilation: The Rate of Moving Clocks and Other Processes in Systems in Motion
  • 1.4. Length Contraction: The Length of Moving Rods and Other Objects in Motion
  • 1.5. The Addition of Velocities
  • 2. Special Relativity and Minkowski Space-Time
  • 2.1. Minkowski or Space-Time Diagrams
  • 2.2. Relativity of Simultaneity: Different Observers Carving Minkowski Space-Time into Different Sim
  • 2.3. Tachyons, Causal Loops, and Causal Paradoxes
  • 2.4. Time Dilation and Length Contraction: Different Observers Using Different Line Segments to Dete
  • 2.5. Euclidean Geometry and the Geometry of Minkowski Space-Time
  • 2.6. The Analogue of the Pythagorean Theorem in Minkowski Space-Time
  • 2.7. The Twin Paradox
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
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