
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.
This book investigates the complex theoretical framework of Ludwig Boltzmann to clarify his foundational contributions to statistical mechanics. Olivier Darrigol, a historian of physics, utilizes a comprehensive analysis of Boltzmann's original publications to bridge the gap between the physicist's dense, idiosyncratic writing style and modern scientific understanding. The text argues that Boltzmann's constructive approach to formal systems was a deliberate, albeit often misunderstood, method for linking micro-scale atomic behavior to macro-scale thermodynamic phenomena.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a rigorous and necessary guide for navigating the challenging prose of Boltzmann's original papers. Readers frequently note the academic density of the text, which is best suited for those with a strong background in physics or the history of science.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0191853666
ISBN-13:
9780191853661
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