Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1161246 Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 2013 20 Pages PDF
Abstract

The present paper attempts to show that a 1915 article by Erich Kretschmann must be credited not only for being the source of Einstein's point-coincidence, but also for having anticipated the main lines of the logical-empiricist interpretation of general relativity. Whereas Kretschmann was inspired by the work of Mach and Poincaré, Einstein inserted Kretschmann's point-coincidence parlance into the context of Ricci and Levi-Civita's absolute differential calculus. Kretschmann himself realized this and turned the point-coincidence argument against Einstein in his second and more famous 1918 paper. While Einstein had taken nothing from Kretschmann but the expression “point-coincidences”, the logical empiricists, however, instinctively dragged along with it the entire apparatus of Kretschmann's conventionalism. Disappointingly, in their interpretation of general relativity, the logical empiricists unwittingly replicated some epistemological remarks Kretschmann had written before general relativity even existed.

► A 1915 article by Kretschmann was the source of Einstein's point-coincidence remark. ► Einstein took from Kretschmann nothing but the expression “point coincidences”. ► Logical Empiricists unwittingly reproduced Kretschmann's and not Einstein's argument.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Physics and Astronomy (General)
Authors
,