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Sozialistische Intensivierung der Produktion und die weitere Erhöhung des materiellen und kulturellen Lebensniveaus des VolkesDeutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 24 (11): 1316-1325. 2014.
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29What is Today’s Mental Model of the Photon?In Photons: The History and Mental Models of Light Quanta, Springer Verlag. pp. 169-182. 2018.What is today’s mental model of the photon? Naively materialistic projectile or corpuscular interpretations of light were defended not only by Isaac Newton and his many nineteenth-century acolytes but by important experimental physicists from the following century, such as Johannes Stark or Arthur Holly Compton. Thomas Young, Augustin Fresnel and many other scientists of the nineteenth and early twentieth century countered it with an equally naively absolutist wave theory of light underpinned by…Read more
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24Light Quanta Reflected in Textbooks and Science TeachingIn Photons: The History and Mental Models of Light Quanta, Springer Verlag. pp. 133-139. 2018.How are these developments reflected in textbooks and scientific instruction? Charts and examples show how eight significant episodes in the history of the introduction of the light quantum are barely adequately or insufficiently treated in over 100 analyzed science textbooks and almost 40 practical instruction manuals. Coming generations of scientists are repeatedly confronted with historically false myths, barring the way toward a deeper understanding of the historical processes but also to su…Read more
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32Twelve Semantic Layers of ‘Light Quantum’ and ‘Photon’In Photons: The History and Mental Models of Light Quanta, Springer Verlag. pp. 39-92. 2018.Proceeding from the introductory propositions about semantic accretion and folds or ‘convolutions’ of meaning, we now treat the conceptual history of light quanta or photons. The twelve semantic layers forming the notion are presented: (1) the particle model of light, starting with Newton into the nineteenth century; (2) light propagation having a finite high velocity; (3) the emission and absorption of light particles by matter; (4) the transfer onto matter of momentum as well as (5) of energy …Read more
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39Quantum Experiments with Photons Since 1945In Photons: The History and Mental Models of Light Quanta, Springer Verlag. pp. 145-168. 2018.Photon experiments in quantum mechanics (since 1945) are discussed. Sect. 8.1 begins with photon clumping since Hanbury Brown and Twiss 1955–57. Sects. 8.2–8.3 report about beam-splitter experiments on single photons, and single-photon interference by Taylor 1909 up to Grangier et al. (1986). Sects. 8.4–8.5 cover Alain Aspect’s experiments on EPR photon-photon correlations 1980ff. and Wheeler’s delayed-choice and which-way experiments, which later developed into quantum entanglement and quantum …Read more
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22Planck’s and Einstein’s Pathways to QuantizationIn Photons: The History and Mental Models of Light Quanta, Springer Verlag. pp. 9-38. 2018.Planck’s and Einstein’s steps toward quantization are discussed, including a historical comparison of these two very different thinkers, their motives and heuristics. Sect. 2.2 studies Albert Einstein’s arguments up to the 1905 paper and how the many important publications from this annus mirabilis and shortly afterwards until 1909 are interconnected. Max Planck’s second quantum theory 1909–13 serves as a contrast: with it Planck attempts to retract his hesitantly introduced quantization of ener…Read more
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16The ‘Light Quantum’ as a ‘Conceptual Blend’In Photons: The History and Mental Models of Light Quanta, Springer Verlag. pp. 141-144. 2018.The notion of the ‘light quantum’ is interpreted as a conceptual fusion in the sense of Gilles Fauconnier’s and Mark Turner’s ‘conceptual blending’ (2002). The notion of a black hole can be interpreted as a superpositioning of the everyday notion of a hole in the ground (into which objects, such as golf balls, can fall and disappear) onto the mathematical concept of a space-time singularity. Analogously, photons can be interpreted as a superpositioning of the notion of corpuscularity (from the N…Read more
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30Early Reception of the Light QuantumIn Photons: The History and Mental Models of Light Quanta, Springer Verlag. pp. 123-132. 2018.If Einstein himself could not fully cope with his concept of light quanta, it is no wonder that his contemporaries would not enthusiastically rally behind it from the start either. The early reception of the concept of light quanta starts with initial skepticism by almost the entire scientific community (including many of Einstein’s strongest supporters, e.g., Max Planck and his pupil Max von Laue). Sect. 5.2 interprets the Compton effect 1922/23 as a watershed and Sect. 5.3 discusses the theory…Read more
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6SummaryIn Photons: The History and Mental Models of Light Quanta, Springer Verlag. pp. 183-185. 2018.The six main mental models of light quanta are recapitulated: the corpuscular model, the singularity model, the binary model of photons, the wave packet, the semiclassical model and, finally, QED. My picture of the emergence and development of concepts as layered semantic accretion seems to me the most suitable model for these very long-term, multilayered processes involving a gradual formation of signification and shifting over time.
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17IntroductionIn Photons: The History and Mental Models of Light Quanta, Springer Verlag. pp. 1-7. 2018.Why could it be useful to think about the complex history of a concept like the photon? The dense stratification of a dozen layers of meaning, which are fused together in this concept is still a live issue. For a deeper understanding it is instructive to study the history behind the concept and the cognitive obstacles faced by some of the world’s most brilliant physicists. Participation in those profound, sometimes heated debates opens deep insights into the way in which our conceptual apparatus…Read more
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30Early Mental ModelsIn Photons: The History and Mental Models of Light Quanta, Springer Verlag. pp. 93-121. 2018.The mental models by early actors are presented. Sect 4.1 discusses Isaac Newton’s “globuli of light” along with amendments by some of his important adherents; the next two sections cover Einstein’s mental model of light quanta around 1909 as singularities in the radiation field, along with his doubts about it 1910–15. Sects. 4.4–4.6 review the mental models of three influential experimental physicists: Johannes Stark’s light quanta, J.J. Thomson’s model of hard x rays, and W.H. Bragg’s neutral …Read more
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30(Mis-)Interpretations of the Theory of Relativity – Considerations on How They Arise and How to Analyze ThemIn Chiara Russo Krauss & Luigi Laino (eds.), Philosophers and Einstein's Relativity: The Early Philosophical Reception of the Relativistic Revolution, Springer Verlag. pp. 1-33. 2023.During Einstein’s lifetime, the special and general theories of relativity were quite frequently interpreted by philosophers. Most of these interpretations actually were misinterpretations. Even today interpretative statements about relativity theory are often false or highly misleading. Why is this so? In my Ph.D. dissertation (Hentschel 1990a), I analyzed (mis)interpretations by 10 different philosophical schools active in the early twentieth century which widely differed in their approaches, …Read more
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26Philosophical Interpretations of Relativity Theory: 1910-1930PSA Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1990 (2): 169-179. 1990.This paper is a summary of my doctoral dissertation on philosophical interpretations of Einstein’s special and general theories of relativity, submitted to the Dept. for History of Science, Univ. of Hamburg, in 1989, which was recently published in the Series Science Networks at Birkäuser.2 After a brief overview of its content I will focus on a discussion of the method employed to analyse philosophical interpretations of a physical theory.My analysis is based- firstly on about 2500 contemporary…Read more
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38Die Relativitatstheorien (RT) Einsteins gehoren zu den meistdiskutierten Theorien der Physik des zwanzigsten Jahrhunderts. Nach der Formulie rung der sog. 'speziellen Relativitatstheorie' (SRT) im Jahr 1905 nah men zunachst nur einige Spezialisten von ihr Kenntnis, bis mit ungefiihr fiinf Jahren Verspatung dann auch zunehmend Nicht-Physiker sich mit ihr zu beschaftigen begannen, angeregt durch populiirwissenschaftliche, all gemeinverstiindliche 'Einfiihrungen' von Kollegen Einsteins wie z. B.…Read more
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26RezensionenNTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 10 (4): 267-272. 2002.
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45Rezensionen/reviews (review)NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 9 (1): 51-63. 2001.Name der Zeitschrift: Behemoth Jahrgang: 6 Heft: 1 Seiten: 118-129
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25RezensionenReviewsNTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 7 (1): 176-192. 1999.
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30RezensionenNTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 12 (1): 60-64. 2004.
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30Reviews (review)NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 7 (1): 45-64. 1999.
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26RezensionenReviewsNTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 4 (1): 56-64. 1996.
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27RezensionenNTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 10 (1-3): 53-64. 2002.
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56Wissenschaftliche Photographie als visuelle Kultur. Die Erforschung und Dokumentation von SpektrenBerichte Zur Wissenschafts-Geschichte 28 (3): 193-214. 2005.
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28RezensionenReviewsNTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 8 (1): 48-64. 2000.
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33Zur Geschichte der MaterialforschungNTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 19 (1): 1-3. 2011.
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38RezensionenReviewsNTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 6 (1): 175-192. 1998.
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1Zur Rolle Hans Reichenbachs in den Debatten um dieIn Stephen Everson (ed.), Language: Companions to Ancient Thought, Vol. 3, Cambridge University Press. 1994.
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54Wissenschaftliche Photographie als visuelle Kultur. Die Erforschung und Dokumentation von Spektren†Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 28 (3): 193-214. 2005.This paper discusses facets of 19th-century scientific photography as a visual culture. The example of spectral research and documentation is particularly well suited, because prismatically diffracted light from the sun or from luminous gases was one of the most frequently examined phenomena of that century. The results were significant not only for physics but also for analytical chemistry and astrophysics. The spectrum also served as an ideal test object for checking the effectiveness of a wid…Read more
Areas of Specialization
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| History of Science |
| General Philosophy of Science |
| History of Physics |
| History of Science, Misc |
| History of Western Philosophy |
| Scientific Change |