Kantian Influence on Einstein
Y. S. Kim (2004.10.5)
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Immanuel Kant
(1724-1804)
Portrait from the Kant Museum in Kaliningrad (Russia).
Recent Photos from Kaliningrad , where he was born and lived for 80 years of his entire life.
For an arxived article, click here.
Please visit
www.philosophypages.com/ph/kant.htm
for books and articles on Kant.
1. Kantianism as a Product of Geography
Kant was born in the city of Koenigsberg. He spent his entire life there. Do you know where this city is or was? Like the Mediterranean Ocean, the Baltic Sea was the basin of the civilization in its own area. About four hundred years ago, Lithuania and Poland were very strong countries. There was a Baltic costal area between these two countries, which became one of the commercial centers strong enough to assert independence from the two strong neighbors.This place became a country called Prussia and became rich and strong enough to acquire some land west of Poland including Berlin. Then the center of gravity of Prussia moved to Germany, and the original Prussia became a province of Germany called "East Prussia." In Poland, this area is still called Prussia.
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Let us look at the map containing both the Baltic and Black Seas (map from an old Webster World Atlas). Eastern and Western Europes are divided by a land strip between these two seas. There are no natural barriers between this broad borderland, and anyone with a strong army could walk into or walk through this area. Accordingly the city of Koenigsberg had been under many different managements.
There were native citizens in Koenigsberg like all other cities in the world. However, this city had to host many influential visitors with money or political powers. Koenigsberg had to entertain those coming with different viewpoints. There are many historians who carried out systematic investigations on Koenigsberg as the background for the philosophy formulated by Immanuel Kant. Here is an for an article on the history of this region.
2. Kantianism at work in Trieste
The city of Trieste is known to physicists as the home of the International Center for Theoretical Physics. The center is about five kilometers away from the downtown, and there is a bus connection along the beach where beautiful girls swim and relax. When I was on the bus with my friend, it was about 60% full and I could see everybody including the driver. I told my friend everybody on this bus in woman. He then told me it is so because my eyes can detect only woman. I never found out whether it was so because there were only women or because of measurement problems with my eyes.After seeing the environment of Trieste, I told my colleagues at a dinner time that Trieste is an excellent city to stage a war. It has sea, mountains, islands, and beautiful ladies. Indeed, a perfect combination. Of course my comment outraged everybody, but military professionals would agree with me. In fact, generals chose this place for their wars in the past. Then what do I have in common with those military people? The answer is very simple. I was born and raised in Korea. When I was born Korea was hosting Japanese troops. American and Soviet troops after 1945. Then the Korean War (1950-53) before coming to the United States 1954 after my high school graduation. This means that my body and mind were configured in the war environment.
That is right. Observations depend on the observer's frame of mind. This is what Kantianism is all about, as far as physics is concerned. Let us go back to the first paragraph's of this section. My friend on the bus was physicist and he was preaching me modern physics, and also Kantianism. Indeed, modern physics is based on the philosophy based on Immanuel Kant.
3. Kantian Influence on Modern Physics
Unlike classical physics, modern physics depends heavily on observer's state of mind or environment. The wave-particle duality is a product of Kantianism. If your detectors can measure only particle properties, particles behave like particles. On the other hand, if your detector can detect only wave properties, particles behave like waves. Heisenberg had come up with the uncertainty principle to reconcile these two different interpretations. This question is still being debated, and is a lively issue these days.In special relativity, observers in different Lorentz frames see the same physical system differently. The importance of the observer's subjective viewpoint was emphasized by Immanuel Kant in his book entitled "Kritik der reinen Vernunft" whose first and second editions were published in 1781 and 1787 respectively. However, using his own logic, he ended up with a conclusion that there must be the absolute inertial frame, and that we only see the frames dictated by our subjectivity.
Einstein's special relativity was developed along Kant's line of thinking: things depend on the frame from which you make observations. However, there is one big difference. Instead of the absolute frame, Einstein introduced an extra dimension. Let us illustrate this using a CocaCola can. It appears like a circle if you look at it from the top, while it appears as a rectangle from the side. The real thing is a three-dimensional circular cylinder. While Kant was obsessed with the absoluteness of the real thing, Einstein was able to observe the importance of the extra dimension.
He added that philosophers do not dictate people how to think, but
their job is to describe systematically how people think. Here, Wigner
was talking about Immanuel Kant who formulated his philosophy based on
the thinking mode of Koenigsburg. Wigner's view of philosophers is
quite consistent with what Karl Marx says on
the marble plate at the entrance to the main building of
Humboldt University in Berlin. Here is what Marx says there.
Wigner told me that I was the only person who asked him this question,
and asked me how I knew the Kantian way of reasoning was working in
his mind. I gave him the following answer.
I would like to answer this question in the following way. Koreans
absorbed a bulk of Chinese culture during the period of the Tang
dynasty (618-907 AD). At that time, China was the center of the world
as the United States is today. This dynasty's intellectual life was
based on Taoism which tells us, among others, that everything in this
universe has to be balanced between its plus (or bright) side and its
minus (or dark) side. This way of thinking forces us to look at things
from two different or opposite directions. This aspect of Taoism could
constitute a ``natural frequency'' which can be tuned to the Kantian
view of the world where things depend how they are observed.
Kant wrote his books in German, but he was born and spent his entire
life in a Baltic enclave now called Kaliningrad located between Poland
and Lithuania. Historically, this place was dominated by several
different countries with different ideologies [2]. However,
Kant's view was that the people there may appear differently depending
on who look at them, but they remain unchanged. At the same time,
they had to entertain different ideologies imposed by different rulers.
Kant translated this philosophy into physics when he discussed the
absolute and relative frames. He was obsessed with the absolute frame,
and this is the reason why Kant is not regarded as a physicist in
Einstein's world in which we live.
The people of Kant's land stayed in the same place while experiencing
different ideological environments. Almost like Kant, I was exposed
to two different cultural environments by moving myself from Asia to
the United States. Thus, I often had to raise the question of
absolute and relative values. Let us discuss this problem using one
concrete example.
Shiyu is still respected in the Eastern world as one of the wisest men
in history. We do not know whether this person existed or is a made-up
personality. In either case, we are led to look for a similar person
in the Western world. In ancient Greece, each city was run by its
city council. As we
experience even these days, people accomplish very little in committee
meetings. Thus, it is safe to assume that the city councils in ancient
Greece did not handle matters too efficiently. For this reason, there
was a well-respected wiseman like Shiyu who never attended his city
council meetings. His name was Idiot. Idiot was a wiseman, but he
never contributed his wisdom to his community. His fellow citizens
labeled him as a useless person. This was how the word idiot was
developed in the Western world.
Idiot and Shiyu had the same personality if they were not the same
person. However, Idiot is a useless person in state-centered societies
like Sparta. The same person is regarded as the ultimate wiseman in a
self-centered society like Korea. I cannot say that I know everything
about other Asian countries, but I have a deep knowledge of Korea where
I was born and raised. The same person looks quite differently to
observers in different cultural frames. While doing research in the
United States with my Eastern background, I was frequently forced to
find a common ground for two seemingly different views.
This cultural
background strongly influenced me in producing the further contents of
Einstein's E = mc2 tabulated in the following table.
Wigner liked this table very much, and this is the reason why I was able
to maintain a relationship with him until he lost his memory power in 1991.
To Kantianists, however, it is quite natural for the same character
to appear differently in two different environments. The problem is
to find the absolute value from these two different faces. Does this
absolute value exist? According to Kant, it exists. To most of us,
it is very difficult to find it if it exists.
Let us finally visit Einstein. He avoids the question of the existence
of the absolute value. Instead, he introduces a new variable. The
variable is the ratio between the individual's ability to contribute
and the community's need for his service. The best way to live in this
world is to adjust this variable to the optimal value. Einstein's
approach is to a quantification of Taoism by introducing a new
variable.
If Taoism is so close to Einsteinism, why do we have to mention Kant
at all? We have to keep in mind that Kant was the first person who
formulated the idea that observers can participate in drawing the
picture of the world. It is not clear whether Einstein could have
formulated his relativity theory without Kant. Indeed, Kant spent many
years for studying physics, namely observer-dependent physics. However,
because of his obsession toward the absolute thing, he spent all of
his time for finding the absolute frame. If one has a Taoist background,
he/she is more likely to appreciate the concept of relativistic
covariance.
I would like to stress that Taoism is not confined to the ancient
Eastern world. It is practiced frequently in the United States.
Let us look at American football games. The offensive strategy does
not rely on brute force, but is aimed at breaking the harmony of the
defense. For instance, when the offensive team is near the end zone,
the defense becomes very strong because it covers only a small area.
Then, it is not uncommon for the offense to place four wide-receivers
instead of two. This will divide the defense into two sides while
creating a hole in the middle. Then the quarter-back can carry the
ball to the end zone. The key word is to destroy the balance of the
defense.
I started my research on Einstein's Kantian connection in 1994 and
included my first writing on this subject in one of the conference
preceedings published in 1995 [5].
For an arxived article,
click here.
Recent Photos
from Kant's birth place, where he lived for 80 years.
Please visit
www.philosophypages.com/ph/kant.htm for books and articles on
Kant.
During the years
1985 - 1991, I went to Princeton every two weeks to tell Eugene
Wigner stories he wanted to hear. Of course I was telling him about
physics. In order to do this, I had to tune my mode of thinking to
Wigner's way of reasoning. I once asked him whether he thinks like
Immanuel Kant. He said Yes. I then asked him whether
Einstein was a Kantianist in his opinion. Wigner said very firmly Yes.
I then asked him whether he studied the philosophy of Kant while he
was in college. He said No, and said that he realized he had been a
Kantianist after writing so many papers in physics.
Let us see how Wigner talks when he talks about Einstein.
Click here.
He talks about things from two different view points.
4. Kantianism and Taoism
I never had any formal education in oriental philosophy, but I know
that my frame of thinking is affected by
my Korean background. One
important aspect is that Immanuel Kant's name is known to every
high-school graduate in Korea, while he is unknown to Americans,
particularly to American physicists. The question then is whether
there is in Eastern culture a ``natural frequency'' which can
resonate with one of the frequencies radiated from Kantianism developed
in Europe.
I would like to point out that Hideki Yukawa was quite fond of Taoism and
studied systematically the books of Laotse and Chuangtse who were the
founding fathers of Taoism [1]. Both Laotse and Chuangtse lived before
the time of Confucius. It is interesting to note that Kantianism is
also popular in Japan, and it is my assumption that Kant's
books were translated into Japanese by Japanese philosophers first,
and Koreans of my father's age learned about Kant by reading the
translated versions.
My publication record will indicate that I studied Yukawa's papers
before becoming seriously interested in Wignerism. Indeed, I picked up
a signal of possible connection between Kantianism and Taoism while
reading Yukawa's papers carefully, and this led to my bold venture to
ask Wigner whether he was a Kantianist.
About 4,500 years ago, there was a king named Yao in China. While he
was looking for a man who could serve as the prime minister, he heard
from many people that a person named Shiyu was widely respected and
had a deep knowledge of the world. The king then sent his messengers
to invite Shiyu to come to his palace and to run the country. After
hearing the king's message, Shiyu without saying anything went to a
creek in front of his house and started washing his ears. He thought
he heard the dirtiest story in his life.
Massive/Slow
between
Massless/Fast
Energy
Momentum E=p2/2m
Einstein's
E=(m2 + p2)1/2 E=p
Spin, Gauge,
Helicity S3
S1
S2 Wigner's
Little Group S3
Gauge Trans.
Build
YOUR OWN HOUSE!
5. Relative Values
Let us go back to the question of relative values. For Taoists, those
two opposite faces of the same person is like ``yang'' (plus) versus
``ying'' (minus). Finding the harmony between these two opposite
points of view is the ideal way to live in this world. We cannot
always live like Shiyu, nor like Idiot. The key to happiness is to
find a harmony between the individual and the society to which
he/she belongs. The key word here seems to be ``harmony.''
Taoism forms the philosophical base for Sun Tzu's classic book on
military arts [5]. When I watch the football games, I
watch them as Sun-Tzu games. My maternal grandfather was fluent in
the Chinese classic literature, and he was particularly fond of Sun Tzu.
He told me many stories from Sun Tzu's books. This presumably was
how I inherited some of the Taoist tradition. As I said in this paper,
my research life was influenced by my Asian background. Many of my
Asian friends complain that they are handicapped to do original
research because of the East-West cultural difference. I disagree
with them. This difference could be the richest source of originality.
copyright@2004 by Y. S. Kim, unless otherwise specified. Map of Kaliningrad/
Koenigsberg from this book.