Hopes and Disappointments in Hilbert’s Axiomatic “Foundations of Physics”

Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook 9:225-237 (2002)
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Abstract

Sixteen years after his “Foundations of Geometry,” Hilbert published a communication that bears a similar and, by use of the definite article, even less mistakable title: “The Foundations of Physics.” In the opening paragraph of this article, Hilbert announced his intention self-confidently:In the following, I should like to set up — following the axiomatic method — a new system of fundamental equations of physics, constructed essentially from two simple axioms; equations that are of ideal beauty and in which, as I believe, is contained the solution of both Einstein’s and Mie’s problems

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Hans Reichenbach’s Debt to David Hilbert and Bertrand Russell.Nikolay Milkov - forthcoming - In Elena Ficara, Andrea Reichenberger & Anna-Sophie Heinemann (eds.), Rethinking the History of Logic, Mathematics, and Exact Sciences. Rickmansworth (Herts): College Publications. pp. 259-285.

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Citations of this work

Hilbert's 'foundations of physics': Gravitation and electromagnetism within the axiomatic method.K. A. Brading & T. A. Ryckman - 2008 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 39 (1):102-153.

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