Grete Hermann
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters". Grete Hermann (2 March 1901 – 15 April 1984) was a German mathematician and philosopher noted for her work in mathematics, physics, philosophy and education. She is noted for her early philosophical work on the foundations of quantum mechanics, and is now known most of all for an early, but long-ignored critique of the no hidden variables proof by John von Neumann.
Early life and education
Hermann was born in Lehe,[1] a port city of the German Empire, where her father Gerhard Heinrich Hermann[2] was a merchant sailor officer for Norddeutscher Lloyd who also co-owned a stonework factory.[3] Her mother Clara Auguste Template:Nee[2] was dedicated to religious studies.[4] Both of her grandfathers were pastors.[5] She was raised in a middle-class Protestant family with five siblings,[4] including physicist Carl H. Hermann.[1] She became critical of religion during World War I (WWI).[4] She took piano lessons.[3] Her father abandoned the family and his work to become a wandering "itinerant preacher" in 1921 and she left the church.[4]
She attended Template:Ill,[6] which was unusual for girls at the time, and after graduating in 1920,[4] she took the exam to become a teacher there.[6] However, she instead enrolled at the University of Göttingen in 1921 with her two older brothers[4] to study Mathematics.[7]
At Göttingen, Hermann was the first student of mathematician Emmy Noether. She also studied under Edmund Landau.[4] She defended her thesis in 1925, which included her majors of study.[6] She was awarded her Doctor of Philosophy in Mathematics with minors in Philosophy and Physics.[7] Her thesis was published in 1926 in Mathematische Annalen and incorporated the work of Kurt Hentzelt,[8] a student of Noether and Ernst Sigismund Fischer at the University of Erlangen who died in WWI.[9][10] Hermann posthumously published Hentzelt's theorems.[3]The Question of Finitely Many Steps in Polynomial Ideal Theory (Template:Langx) is the foundational paper for modern computer algebra. It first established the existence of algorithms (including complexity bounds) for many of the basic problems of abstract algebra, such as ideal membership for polynomial rings. Hermann's algorithm for primary decomposition is still in contemporary use.[11]
Career and research
From 1925 to 1927, Hermann worked as assistant for Leonard Nelson.[12] Together with Minna Specht, she posthumously published Nelson's work System der philosophischen Ethik und Pädagogik,[13] while continuing her own research.
Quantum mechanics
As a philosopher, Hermann had a particular interest in the foundations of physics. In 1934, she went to Leipzig "for the express purpose of reconciling a neo-Kantian conception of causality with the new quantum mechanics". In Leipzig, many exchanges of thoughts took place among Hermann, Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker, and Werner Heisenberg.[14] In these discussions, she argued that Kantian causality should remain secure, and questioned whether quantum uncertainty reflected subjective ignorance or a principled limit requiring a revision of the Kantian framework.[15] The contents of her work in this time, including a focus on a distinction of predictability and causality, are known from three of her own publications,[12] and from later description of their discussions by von Weizsäcker,[16] and the discussion of Hermann's work in chapter ten of Heisenberg's Physics and Beyond.[17] Heisenberg describes her as dissatisfied with intermediate positions, but as partly reassured by replies influenced by Niels Bohr, and presents the exchange as clarifying the relation between Kantian concepts and modern physics.[15]
From Denmark, she published her work The foundations of quantum mechanics in the philosophy of nature (Template:Langx). This work has been referred to as "one of the earliest and best philosophical treatments of the new quantum mechanics".[17] In this work, she concludes:
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The theory of quantum mechanics forces us […] to drop the assumption of the absolute character of knowledge about nature, and to deal with the principle of causality independently of this assumption. Quantum mechanics has therefore not contradicted the law of causality at all, but has clarified it and has removed from it other principles which are not necessarily connected to it.
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In June 1936, Hermann was awarded the Richard Avenarius prize together with Eduard May and Th. Vogel.[19][20]
Hidden variables
Based on her views on quantum causality, Hermann concluded that there was no way to explain quantum mechanics in terms of a hidden variable theory. However, she published a critique of John von Neumann's 1932 proof from his book Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, that was widely claimed to show that such a theory was impossible. Hermann's work on this subject went unnoticed by the physics community until it was independently discovered and published by John Stewart Bell in 1966, and her earlier discovery was pointed out by Max Jammer in 1974.[21][22] Some have posited that had her critique not remained nearly unknown for decades, her ideas would have put in question the unequivocal acceptance of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, by providing a credible basis for the further development of nonlocal hidden variable theories, which would have changed the historical development of quantum mechanics.[12]
Emigration and later years
As Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany, Hermann participated in the underground movement against the Nazis. She was a member of the Internationaler Sozialistischer Kampfbund (ISK).[23] By 1936, Hermann left Germany for Denmark and later France and England.[23] In London, in order to avoid standing out on account of her German provenance, she married a man called Edward Henry early in 1938.[24] Her prescience was justified by events: two years later the British government invoked its hitherto obscure 1939 Defence Regulation 18B, identifying several thousand refugees who had fled Germany for reasons of politics or race as enemy aliens and placing them in internment camps.[25]
After World War II ended in 1945, she was able to combine her interests in physics and mathematics with political philosophy. She rejoined the Social Democratic Party (SPD) on returning in 1946 to what would become, in 1949, the German Federal Republic (West Germany). Starting in 1947 she was one of those contributing behind the scenes to the Bad Godesberg Programme, prepared under the leadership of her longstanding ISK comrade Willi Eichler, and issued in 1959, which provided a detailed modernising platform that carried the party into government in the 1960s.[3]
She was nominated professor for philosophy and physics in 1950[7] at the Template:Ill and played a relevant role in the Education and Science Workers' Union. From 1961 to 1978, she presided over the Template:Ill, an organisation founded by Nelson in 1922, oriented towards education, social justice, responsible political action and its philosophical basis.[23][26]
Works
- Grete Hermann: Die naturphilosophischen Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik, Naturwissenschaften, Volume 23, Number 42, 718–721, Script error: No such module "CS1 identifiers". (preview in German language)
- Grete Hermann: Die Frage der endlich vielen Schritte in der Theorie der Polynomideale. Unter Benutzung nachgelassener Sätze von K. Hentzelt, Mathematische Annalen, Volume 95, Number 1, 736–788, Script error: No such module "CS1 identifiers". (abstract in German language) — The question of finitely many steps in polynomial ideal theory (review and English-language translation)
References
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- ↑ Minna Specht Template:Webarchive, Philosophisch-Politische Akademie (in German language), doanloaded 22 January 2012
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- ↑ Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker, see for example: Jagdish Mehra, Helmut Rechenberg: The Historical Development of Quantum Theory, Volume 6 The Completion of Quantum Mechanics 1926–1941, Part 2, Springer, 2001, Template:ISBN, p. 712 f.
- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Grete Hermann: The foundations of quantum mechanics in the philosophy of nature. Cited after its translation from German with an introduction by Dirk Lumma in The Harvard Review of Philosophy VII (1999), p. 35 ff.
- ↑ C. F. Freiherr v. Weizsäcker (interviewed), Konrad Lindner: Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker über sein Studium in Leipzig, NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 3-18, Script error: No such module "CS1 identifiers"., see fulltext
- ↑ V. F. Lenzen: Die Bedeutung der Modernen Physik für die Theorie der Erkenntnis. Drei mit dem Richard Avenarius-Preis ausgezeichnete Arbeiten von Dr. Grete Hermann, Dr. E. May, Dr. Th. Vogel, In A. P. Ushenko (ed.): The Philosophy of Relativity, Science, vol. 85, no. 2217 (25 June 1937), pp. 606-607
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- ↑ a b c Grete Henry-Hermann, Friedrich Ebert Foundation, downloaded 22 January 2012
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- ↑ Philosophisch-Politische Akademie (in German language), downloaded 22 January 2012
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- This article incorporates material from Grete Hermann on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
Further reading
- C. Herzenberg: Grete Hermann: Mathematician, Physicist, Philosopher, Bulletin of the American Physical Society, 2008 APS April Meeting and HEDP/HEDLA Meeting, Volume 53, Number 5, 11–15 April 2008 in St. Louis, Missouri (abstract)
- Vera Venz: Zur Biografie von Grete Hermann, GRIN 2009, First edition 2001, Template:ISBN (in German language)
External links
- Template:PAGENAMEBASE at the Mathematics Genealogy ProjectTemplate:EditAtWikidata
- Grete Henry's "The Significance of Behaviour Study for the Critique of Reason," Ratio, Volume XV, No. 2, December 1973 at the Friesian School
- Grete Henry-Hermann: Politically minded scientist Template:Webarchive by F. Kersting (German language version Template:Webarchive, exhibition catalog Template:ISBN)
- Grete Hermann: Mathematician, Philosopher and Physicist by Giulia Paparo (MA Thesis) at Academia.edu [accessible with free registration]
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- 1901 births
- 1984 deaths
- 20th-century German mathematicians
- 20th-century German philosophers
- 20th-century German physicists
- 20th-century German women scientists
- German women physicists
- German philosophers of science
- German women philosophers
- 20th-century German women mathematicians
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