| | Philosophy and...Symmetry
Today is the 21st birthday of my note "The Relativity Problem in Finite Geometry."
Some relevant quotations:
"This is the relativity problem: to fix objectively a class of
equivalent coordinatizations and to ascertain the group of transformations S
mediating between them."
-- Hermann Weyl, The Classical Groups,
Princeton University Press, 1946, p. 16
Describing the branch of mathematics
known as Galois theory, Weyl says that it "... is nothing else but the relativity theory for the set Sigma,
a set which, by its discrete and finite character, is conceptually so much
simpler than the infinite set of points in space or space-time dealt with by
ordinary relativity theory."
-- Weyl, Symmetry, Princeton
University Press, 1952, p. 138
Weyl's set Sigma is a finite set of complex numbers.
Some other sets with "discrete and finite character" are those of 4, 8,
16, or 64 points, arranged in squares and cubes. For
illustrations, see Finite Geometry of the Square and Cube.
What Weyl calls "the relativity problem" for these sets involves fixing
"objectively" a class of equivalent coordinatizations. For what
Weyl's "objectively" means, see the article "Symmetry and Symmetry Breaking," by Katherine Brading and Elena Castellani, in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy:
"The
old and natural idea that what is objective should not depend upon the
particular perspective under which it is taken into consideration is
thus reformulated in the following group-theoretical terms: what is
objective is what is invariant with respect to the transformation
group of reference frames, or, quoting Hermann Weyl (1952, p. 132),
'objectivity means invariance with respect to the group of
automorphisms [of
space-time].'[22]
22. The significance of the
notion of invariance and its group-theoretic treatment for the issue
of objectivity is explored in Born (1953), for example. For more
recent discussions see Kosso (2003) and Earman (2002, Sections 6 and
7).
References:
Born, M., 1953, "Physical Reality," Philosophical
Quarterly, 3, 139-149. Reprinted in E. Castellani (ed.),
Interpreting Bodies: Classical and Quantum Objects in Modern
Physics, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998,
pp. 155-167.
Earman, J., 2002, "Laws, Symmetry, and Symmetry Breaking;
Invariance, Conservation Principles, and Objectivity,' PSA
2002, Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science
Association 2002, forthcoming
[Abstract/Preprint available online]
Kosso, P., 2003, "Symmetry, objectivity, and design," in
K. Brading and E. Castellani (eds.), Symmetries in Physics:
Philosophical Reflections, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
pp. 410-421.
Weyl, H., 1952, Symmetry, Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press.
See also
Archives Henri Poincaré (research unit UMR 7117, at Université
Nancy 2, of the CNRS)--
"Minkowski, Mathematicians, and the Mathematical Theory of Relativity," by Scott Walter, in The Expanding Worlds of General Relativity (Einstein Studies, volume 7), H. Goenner, J. Renn, J. Ritter and T. Sauer, editors, Boston/Basel: Birkhäuser, 1999, pp. 45-86--
"Developing his ideas before Göttingen mathematicians in April 1909,
Klein pointed out that the new theory based on the Lorentz group (which
he preferred to call 'Invariantentheorie') could have come from pure
mathematics (1910: 19). He felt that the new theory was anticipated by
the ideas on geometry and groups that he had introduced in 1872,
otherwise known as the Erlangen program (see Gray 1989: 229)."
References:
Gray, Jeremy J. (1989). Ideas of Space. 2d ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Klein, Felix. (1910). "Über die geometrischen Grundlagen der Lorentzgruppe." Jahresbericht der deutschen Mathematiker-Vereinigung 19: 281-300. [Reprinted: Physikalische Zeitschrift 12 (1911): 17-27].
Related material: A pathetically garbled version of the above
concepts was published in 2001 by Harvard University Press. See Invariances: The Structure of the Objective World, by Robert Nozick.
|