Articulating Space in Terms of Transformation Groups: Helmholtz and Cassirer

Hermann von Helmholtz’s geometrical papers (1868–1878) have been typically deemed to provide an implicitly group-theoretical analysis of space, as articulated later by Felix Klein, Sophus Lie, and Henri Poincaré. However, there is less agreement as to what properties exactly in such a view would per...

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Main Author: Francesca Biagioli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MULPress 2018-02-01
Series:Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy
Online Access:https://jhaponline.org/jhap/article/view/3436
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spelling doaj-75f4ccf5faca4dd2ab0ed68647c1b6f62020-11-25T04:02:57ZengMULPressJournal for the History of Analytical Philosophy2159-03032018-02-016310.15173/jhap.v6i3.3436Articulating Space in Terms of Transformation Groups: Helmholtz and CassirerFrancesca Biagioli0University of ViennaHermann von Helmholtz’s geometrical papers (1868–1878) have been typically deemed to provide an implicitly group-theoretical analysis of space, as articulated later by Felix Klein, Sophus Lie, and Henri Poincaré. However, there is less agreement as to what properties exactly in such a view would pertain to space, as opposed to abstract mathematical structures, on the one hand, and empirical contents, on the other. According to Moritz Schlick, the puzzle can be resolved only by clearly distinguishing the empirical qualities of spatial perception from those describable in terms of axiomatic geometry. This paper offers a partial defense of the group-theoretical reading of Helmholtz along the lines of Ernst Cassirer in the fourth volume of The Problem of Knowledge of 1940. In order to avoid the problem raised by Schlick, Cassirer relied on a Kantian view of space not so much as an object of geometry, but as a precondition for the possibility of measurement. Although the concept of group does not provide a description of space, the modern way to articulate the concept of space in terms of transformation groups reveals something about the structure and the transformation of spatial concepts in mathematical and natural sciences.https://jhaponline.org/jhap/article/view/3436
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesca Biagioli
spellingShingle Francesca Biagioli
Articulating Space in Terms of Transformation Groups: Helmholtz and Cassirer
Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy
author_facet Francesca Biagioli
author_sort Francesca Biagioli
title Articulating Space in Terms of Transformation Groups: Helmholtz and Cassirer
title_short Articulating Space in Terms of Transformation Groups: Helmholtz and Cassirer
title_full Articulating Space in Terms of Transformation Groups: Helmholtz and Cassirer
title_fullStr Articulating Space in Terms of Transformation Groups: Helmholtz and Cassirer
title_full_unstemmed Articulating Space in Terms of Transformation Groups: Helmholtz and Cassirer
title_sort articulating space in terms of transformation groups: helmholtz and cassirer
publisher MULPress
series Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy
issn 2159-0303
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Hermann von Helmholtz’s geometrical papers (1868–1878) have been typically deemed to provide an implicitly group-theoretical analysis of space, as articulated later by Felix Klein, Sophus Lie, and Henri Poincaré. However, there is less agreement as to what properties exactly in such a view would pertain to space, as opposed to abstract mathematical structures, on the one hand, and empirical contents, on the other. According to Moritz Schlick, the puzzle can be resolved only by clearly distinguishing the empirical qualities of spatial perception from those describable in terms of axiomatic geometry. This paper offers a partial defense of the group-theoretical reading of Helmholtz along the lines of Ernst Cassirer in the fourth volume of The Problem of Knowledge of 1940. In order to avoid the problem raised by Schlick, Cassirer relied on a Kantian view of space not so much as an object of geometry, but as a precondition for the possibility of measurement. Although the concept of group does not provide a description of space, the modern way to articulate the concept of space in terms of transformation groups reveals something about the structure and the transformation of spatial concepts in mathematical and natural sciences.
url https://jhaponline.org/jhap/article/view/3436
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