Geodesic completeness of generalized space-times
Sämann, C Steinbauer, R Operator Theory: Advances and Applications volume 245 243-253 (01 Jan 2015)
The global uniqueness and C 1-regularity of geodesics in expanding impulsive gravitational waves
Podolský, J Sämann, C Steinbauer, R Švarc, R Classical and Quantum Gravity volume 33 issue 19 195010- (06 Oct 2016)
Completeness of general pp-wave spacetimes and their impulsive limit
Sämann, C Steinbauer, R Švarc, R Classical and Quantum Gravity volume 33 issue 21 215006- (03 Nov 2016)
Penrose junction conditions extended: Impulsive waves with gyratons
Podolský, J Švarc, R Steinbauer, R Sämann, C Physical Review D volume 96 issue 6 064043- (15 Sep 2017)
Geodesics in nonexpanding impulsive gravitational waves with Λ. II
Sämann, C Steinbauer, R Journal of Mathematical Physics volume 58 issue 11 112503- (01 Nov 2017)
On geodesics in low regularity
Sämann, C Steinbauer, R Journal of Physics Conference Series volume 968 issue 1 012010- (22 Feb 2018)
Lorentzian length spaces.
Kunzinger, M Sämann, C Annals of global analysis and geometry volume 54 issue 3 399-447 (05 Jan 2018)
Inextendibility of spacetimes and Lorentzian length spaces.
Grant, J Kunzinger, M Sämann, C Annals of global analysis and geometry volume 55 issue 1 133-147 (10 Jan 2019)
The future is not always open.
Grant, J Kunzinger, M Sämann, C Steinbauer, R Letters in mathematical physics volume 110 issue 1 83-103 (12 Jan 2020)
Wed, 22 Feb 2023

17:00 - 18:30
L4

On the uses and abuses of the history of mathematics

Nicolas Michel
(Bergische Universitaet Wuppertal)
Abstract

Mathematicians frequently present their own work in a diachronic fashion, e.g. by comparing their "modern" methods to those supposedly of the "Ancients," or by situating their latest theories as an "abstract" counterpart to more "classical" ones. The construction of such contrasts entangle mathematical labour and cultural life writ large. Indeed, it involves on the part of mathematicians the shaping up of correspondences between their technical achievements and intellectual discussions taking place on a much broader stage, such as those surrounding the concept of modernity, its relation to an imagined ancient past, or the characterisation of scientific progress as an increase in abstraction. This talk will explore the creation and use of such mathematical diachronies, the focus being on the works of Felix Klein, Hieronymus Zeuthen, and Hermann Schubert.

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