This book fills a much needed gap

Paul K. Feyerabend, Quantum Theory and Our View of the World inside Physics and Our View of the World, edited by Jan Hilgevoord 



When I was a student in Vienna, in the late 1940s, we had three physicists who were known to a wider public: Karl Przibram, Felix Ehrenhaft and Hans Thirring. Przibram was an experimentalist, a pupil of J. J. Thomson whom he often mentioned with reverence. Philosophers of science know him as the editor of a correspondence on wave mechanics between Schrodinger, Lorentz, Planck and Einstein. He was the brother of Hans Przibram, the biologist, and, I believe, the uncle of the neurophysiologist Karl Przibram. He talked with a subdued voice and wrote tiny equations on the blackboard. Occasionally his lectures were interrupted by shouting, laughing and trampling from below; that was Ehrenhaft’s audience.

Ehrenhaft had been professor of theoretical and experimental physics in Vienna. He left when the Nazis came; he returned in 1947. By that time many physicists regarded him as a charlatan. He had produced and kept producing evidence for subelectrons, magnetic monopoles of mesoscopic size and magnetolysis, and he held that the inertial path was a spiral, not a geodesic. His attitude towards theory was identical with that of Lenard and Stark whom he often mentioned with approval. He challenged us to criticize him and laughed when he realized how strongly we believed in the excellence of say, Maxwell’s equations without having calculated and tested specific effects.

During a summer school in Alpbach he set up his experiments in a little farmhouse and invited everyone to have a look. Leon Rosenfeld was there; so was Maurice Pryce, one of the most abrasive physicists of his generation. They went in; when they reappeared they looked as if they had seen something obscene. However all they could say was ‘obviously a Dreckeffekt’. Afterwards, in Ehrenhaft’s lecture, Rosenfeld and Pryce sat in the front row. Having described his experiments Ehrenhaft went up to them and exclaimed: ‘Was können sie sagen mit allen ihren schönen Theorien? Nichts können sie sagen. Still müssen sie sein. Sitzen müssen sie bleiben.’ (What can they say with all their fine theories? They can say nothing. They must be silent. They must remain seated.) And, indeed, Rosenfeld and Pryce, so eloquent on other occasions, did not say a single word. Ehrenhaft may not have been mainstream. But he made us think — more than many mainstream scientists before and after him.


Manjit Kumar, Quantum: Einstein, Bohr, and the Great Debate about the Nature of Reality
W. W. Norton & Company, 2010 


In the 1890s some of Germany’s leading physicists were obsessively pursuing a problem that had long vexed them: what was the relationship between the temperature, the range of colours, and the intensity of light emitted by a hot iron poker? It seemed a trivial problem compared to the mystery of X-rays and radioactivity that had physicists rushing to their laboratories and reaching for their notebooks. But for a nation forged only in 1871, the quest for the solution to the hot iron poker, or what became known as ‘the blackbody problem’, was intimately bound up with the need to give the German lighting industry a competitive edge against its British and American competitors. But try as they might, Germany’s finest physicists could not solve it. In 1896 they thought they had, only to find within a few short years that new experimental data proved that they had not. It was Max Planck who solved the blackbody problem, at a cost. The price was the quantum.

Driven largely by the abolition of internal tariffs after unification and French war compensation, by the outbreak of the First World War Germany’s industrial output and economic power would be second only to the United States. By then it was producing over two-thirds of continental Europe’s steel, half its coal, and was generating more electricity than Britain, France and Italy combined. Even the recession and anxiety that affected Europe after the stock market crash of 1873 only slowed the pace of German development for a few years.