作者mfluder (Osidius)
看板W-Philosophy
標題Re: 愛因斯坦的一段文字有關數學知識和物理知識的괠…
時間Wed May 30 02:03:00 2007
http://www.ibiblio.org/ebooks/Einstein/Sidelights/Einstein_Sidelights.pdf
[PDF] Sidelights on Relativity
這段話出現在這份pdf的第15頁,上下文如下:
[GEOMETRY AND EXPERIENCE]
(An expanded form of an Address to the Prussian Academy of Sciences
in Berlin on January 27th, 1921. )
ONE reason why mathematics enjoys special esteem, above all
other sciences, is that its laws are absolutely certain and
indisputable, while those of all other sciences are to some
extent debatable and in constant danger of being overthrown by
newly discovered facts. In spite of this, the investigator in another
department of science would not need to envy the mathematician if
the laws of mathematics referred to objects of our mere imagination,
and not to objects of reality. For it cannot occasion surprise that
different persons should arrive at the same logical conclusions when
they have already agreed upon the fundamental laws (axioms), as
well as the methods by which other laws are to be deduced
therefrom. But there is another reason for the high repute of
mathematics, in that it is mathematics which affords the exact
natural sciences a certain measure of security, to which without
mathematics they could not attain.
At this point an enigma presents itself which in all ages has
agitated inquiring minds. How can it be that mathematics, being
after all a product of human thought which is independent of
experience, is so admirably appropriate to the objects of reality? Is
human reason, then, without experience, merely by taking thought,
able to fathom the properties of real things.
In my opinion the answer to this question is, briefly, this:—
As
far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain;
and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. It seems to
me that complete clearness as to this state of things first became
common property through that new departure in mathematics which
is known by the name of mathematical logic or “Axiomatics.” The
progress achieved by axiomatics consists in its having neatly
separated the logical-formal from its objective or intuitive content;
according to axiomatics the logical-formal alone forms the subjectmatter
of mathematics, which is not concerned with the intuitive or
other content associated with the logical-formal.
...
第17頁中的地方,有
Yet on the other hand it is certain that mathematics generally,
and particularly geometry, owes its existence to the need which was
felt of learning something about the relations of real things to one
another. The very word geometry, which, of course, means earthmeasuring,
proves this. For earth-measuring has to do with the
possibilities of the disposition of certain natural objects with respect
to one another, namely, with parts of the earth, measuring-lines,
measuring-wands, etc. It is clear that the system of concepts of
axiomatic geometry alone cannot make any assertions as to the
relations of real objects of this kind, which we will call practicallyrigid
bodies. To be able to make such assertions, geometry must be
stripped of its merely logical-formal character by the co-ordination
of real objects of experience with the empty conceptual frame-work
of axiomatic geometry. To accomplish this, we need only add the
proposition:—Solid bodies are related, with respect to their possible
dispositions, as are bodies in Euclidean geometry of three
dimensions. Then the propositions of Euclid contain affirmations as
to the relations of practically-rigid bodies.
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※ 編輯: mfluder 來自: 140.112.231.216 (05/30 02:59)