The text is well written, clear and supported by black-and-white figures and historical footnotes. This book can be fully recommended to anyone with some background in mathematics and physics who is interested in the course of the discussion that led to modern statistical mechanics. It is also a good read for those interested in Boltzmann as a scientist and those who have a more general interest in the science of the period.

Manuel Vogel, Contemporary Physics

One of the pillars of modern science, statistical mechanics, owes much to one man, the Austrian physicist Ludwig Boltzmann (1844-1906). As a result of his unusual working and writing styles, his enormous contribution remains little read and poorly understood. The purpose of this book is to make the Boltzmann corpus more accessible to physicists, philosophers, and historians, and so give it new life. The means are introductory biographical and historical materials, detailed and lucid summaries of every relevant publication, and a final chapter of critical synthesis. Special attention is given to Boltzmann's theoretical tool-box and to his patient construction of lofty formal systems even before their full conceptual import could be known. This constructive tendency largely accounts for his lengthy style, for the abundance of new constructions, for the relative vagueness of their object--and for the puzzlement of commentators. This book will help the reader cross the stylistic barrier and see how ingeniously Boltzmann combined atoms, mechanics, and probability to invent new bridges between the micro- and macro-worlds.
Les mer
A study of Ludwig Boltzmann's oeuvre in early statistical mechanics. It is designed to reveal Boltzmann's true endeavors and to give new life to his various theoretical constructions. It offers introductory historical and biographical materials, detailed summaries and analyses of all the relevant texts.
Les mer
PART A: Preliminaries 1: Life and work: A sketch 2: Theories of heat: Some background PART B: Exegesis 3: Constructing thermal equilibrium (1866-1871) 4: The Boltzmann equation and the H theorem (1872-1875) 5: The probabilistic turn (1876-1884) 6: The analogical turn (1884-1887) 7: Consolidation (1887-1895) 8: The critical turn (1895-1899) 9: Lectures on gas theory (1896-1898) PART C: Synthetic Reflections 10: Boltzmann's theory
Les mer
Provides a faithful representation of all of Boltzmann's relevant works Clarity allows for a quick understanding of Boltzmann's most difficult reasoning Reveals the secrets of Boltzmann's constructive efficiency, explains his original suspension of conceptual issues, and his late solutions to conceptual difficulties Accessible to various readers, be they interested in overview, in biographical aspects, in specific contributions, in philosophical-methodological issues, or in technical points of physics
Les mer
Olivier Darrigol studied physics at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris, the history and philosophy of physics at the Sorbonne and at UC-Berkeley's Office for History of Science and Technology (OHST). He is the author of several books on the history of quantum physics, electrodynamics, hydrodynamics, and optics. He is currently a member of the SPHere research team at CNRS/Paris 7, and a Research Associate at UC-Berkeley's OHST.
Les mer
Provides a faithful representation of all of Boltzmann's relevant works Clarity allows for a quick understanding of Boltzmann's most difficult reasoning Reveals the secrets of Boltzmann's constructive efficiency, explains his original suspension of conceptual issues, and his late solutions to conceptual difficulties Accessible to various readers, be they interested in overview, in biographical aspects, in specific contributions, in philosophical-methodological issues, or in technical points of physics
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198816171
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
1328 gr
Høyde
248 mm
Bredde
177 mm
Dybde
37 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
640

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Olivier Darrigol studied physics at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris, the history and philosophy of physics at the Sorbonne and at UC-Berkeley's Office for History of Science and Technology (OHST). He is the author of several books on the history of quantum physics, electrodynamics, hydrodynamics, and optics. He is currently a member of the SPHere research team at CNRS/Paris 7, and a Research Associate at UC-Berkeley's OHST.