Translated by Alexander Blum.
| Softcover ISBN: | 978-1-4704-5079-3 |
| Product Code: | HMATH/49 |
| List Price: | $129.00 |
| MAA Member Price: | $116.10 |
| AMS Member Price: | $103.20 |
| Softcover ISBN: | 978-1-4704-5079-3 |
| eBook: ISBN: | |
| Product Code: | HMATH/49.B |
| List Price: | $191.50 |
| MAA Member Price: | $172.35 |
| AMS Member Price: | $153.20 |
Translated by Alexander Blum.
| Softcover ISBN: | 978-1-4704-5079-3 |
| Product Code: | HMATH/49 |
| List Price: | $129.00 |
| MAA Member Price: | $116.10 |
| AMS Member Price: | $103.20 |
| Softcover ISBN: | 978-1-4704-5079-3 |
| eBook ISBN: | |
| Product Code: | HMATH/49.B |
| List Price: | $191.50 |
| MAA Member Price: | $172.35 |
| AMS Member Price: | $153.20 |
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Book DetailsHistory of MathematicsVolume: 49; 2025; Estimated: 372 ppMSC: Primary 81; 01
This book offers a historical analysis of Bartel Leendert van der Waerden’s early contributions to quantum mechanics, in particular, focusing on his role in the development and application of group-theoretic methods around 1930. While van der Waerden is widely known for his modern algebra, his engagement with quantum theory has received little attention in the historical literature.
Through careful study of published and archival sources, the author reconstructs the contexts in which van der Waerden worked, and examines his networks as well as his interactions with contemporaries such as Hermann Weyl, Eugene Wigner, Paul Ehrenfest, and John Slater. By comparing the different emerging approaches of adapting group-theoretic methods to problems in quantum mechanics, the author shows that van der Waerden stands out as a rather pragmatic and undogmatic thinker. Special attention is given to reconstructing a more nuanced picture of the arising controversy around the “group plague” in quantum mechanics.
Combining technical exposition with biographical and historical analysis, the book is intended for mathematicians, physicists, and historians of science. The reader is expected to have beginning, graduate-level knowledge of mathematics—mainly algebra and, in particular, representation theory—as well as some background in quantum physics. The study sheds light on a complex and fascinating period in the development of mathematical physics. It explores the dynamics of the interactions between mathematics and physics, and thus contributes to ongoing discussions about mathematization processes in science in the twentieth century.
ReadershipUndergraduate and graduate students and researchers interested in van der Waerden and the history of quantum mechanics.
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Table of Contents
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Background: The development until circa 1928
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The history of representation theory
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On the development of quantum mechanics
-
Group theory and quantum mechanics until 1928
-
van der Waerden’s scientific development until 1928
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van der Waerden’s first steps in quantum mechanics in Groningen
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van der Waerden as a Professor in Groningen (1928-1931)
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The spinor calculus as a commissioned work for Ehrenfest
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Spinor calculus and wave equation
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van der Waerden and his work on quantum mechanics in Leipzig
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van der Waerden as a Professor in Leipzig (1931-1945)
-
Survey of van der Waerden’s monograph on the group-theoretic method in quantum mechanics
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Representation theory via groups with operators
-
Constructing representations
-
Applications of group theory in quantum mechanics
-
Dealing with Slater’s group-free method
-
Molecular spectra
-
Spinors in general relativity
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Reprecussions on mathematics: The Casimir operator
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Future prospects: van der Waerden and physics after 1945
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Turn towards applied mathematics (1945-1951)
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van der Waerden’s Professorship in Zurich (1951-1972)
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List of archives consulted
-
Credits
-
Bibliography
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RequestsReview Copy – for publishers of book reviewsAccessibility – to request an alternate format of an AMS title
- Book Details
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This book offers a historical analysis of Bartel Leendert van der Waerden’s early contributions to quantum mechanics, in particular, focusing on his role in the development and application of group-theoretic methods around 1930. While van der Waerden is widely known for his modern algebra, his engagement with quantum theory has received little attention in the historical literature.
Through careful study of published and archival sources, the author reconstructs the contexts in which van der Waerden worked, and examines his networks as well as his interactions with contemporaries such as Hermann Weyl, Eugene Wigner, Paul Ehrenfest, and John Slater. By comparing the different emerging approaches of adapting group-theoretic methods to problems in quantum mechanics, the author shows that van der Waerden stands out as a rather pragmatic and undogmatic thinker. Special attention is given to reconstructing a more nuanced picture of the arising controversy around the “group plague” in quantum mechanics.
Combining technical exposition with biographical and historical analysis, the book is intended for mathematicians, physicists, and historians of science. The reader is expected to have beginning, graduate-level knowledge of mathematics—mainly algebra and, in particular, representation theory—as well as some background in quantum physics. The study sheds light on a complex and fascinating period in the development of mathematical physics. It explores the dynamics of the interactions between mathematics and physics, and thus contributes to ongoing discussions about mathematization processes in science in the twentieth century.
Undergraduate and graduate students and researchers interested in van der Waerden and the history of quantum mechanics.
-
Background: The development until circa 1928
-
The history of representation theory
-
On the development of quantum mechanics
-
Group theory and quantum mechanics until 1928
-
van der Waerden’s scientific development until 1928
-
van der Waerden’s first steps in quantum mechanics in Groningen
-
van der Waerden as a Professor in Groningen (1928-1931)
-
The spinor calculus as a commissioned work for Ehrenfest
-
Spinor calculus and wave equation
-
van der Waerden and his work on quantum mechanics in Leipzig
-
van der Waerden as a Professor in Leipzig (1931-1945)
-
Survey of van der Waerden’s monograph on the group-theoretic method in quantum mechanics
-
Representation theory via groups with operators
-
Constructing representations
-
Applications of group theory in quantum mechanics
-
Dealing with Slater’s group-free method
-
Molecular spectra
-
Spinors in general relativity
-
Reprecussions on mathematics: The Casimir operator
-
Future prospects: van der Waerden and physics after 1945
-
Turn towards applied mathematics (1945-1951)
-
van der Waerden’s Professorship in Zurich (1951-1972)
-
List of archives consulted
-
Credits
-
Bibliography
