Hermann von Helmholtz
Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox scientist Template:Thermodynamics
Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz (Template:IPAc-en; {{#invoke:IPA|main}}; 31 August 1821 – 8 September 1894; "von" since 1883) was a German physicist and physician who made significant contributions in several scientific fields, particularly hydrodynamic stability.<ref>Template:Cite thesis</ref> The Helmholtz Association, the largest German association of research institutions, was named in his honour.<ref name="Gemeinschaft">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In the fields of physiology and psychology, Helmholtz is known for his mathematics concerning the eye, theories of vision, ideas on the visual perception of space, colour vision research, the sensation of tone, perceptions of sound, and empiricism in the physiology of perception. In physics, he is known for his theories on the conservation of energy and on the electrical double layer, work in electrodynamics, chemical thermodynamics, and on a mechanical foundation of thermodynamics. Although credit is shared with Julius von Mayer, James Joule, and Daniel Bernoulli—among others—for the energy conservation principles that eventually led to the first law of thermodynamics, he is credited with the first formulation of the energy conservation principle in its maximally general form.<ref name="Patton"/>
As a philosopher, he is known for his philosophy of science, ideas on the relation between the laws of perception and the laws of nature, the science of aesthetics, and ideas on the civilizing power of science. By the late nineteenth century, Helmholtz's development of a broadly Kantian methodology, including the a priori determination of the manifold of possible orientations in perceptual space, had inspired new readings of Kant<ref name="Patton"/> and contributed to the late modern neo-Kantianism movement in philosophy.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
BiographyEdit
Early yearsEdit
Helmholtz was born in Potsdam, the son of the local gymnasium headmaster, Ferdinand Helmholtz, who had studied classical philology and philosophy, and who was a close friend of the publisher and philosopher Immanuel Hermann Fichte. Helmholtz's work was influenced by the philosophy of Johann Gottlieb Fichte and Immanuel Kant. He tried to trace their theories in empirical matters like physiology.
As a young man, Helmholtz was interested in natural science, but his father wanted him to study medicine. Helmholtz earned a medical doctorate at Medizinisch-chirurgisches Friedrich-Wilhelm-Institute in 1842 and served a one-year internship at the Charité hospital<ref>R. S. Turner, In the Eye's Mind: Vision and the Helmholtz-Hering Controversy, Princeton University Press, 2014, p. 36.</ref> (because there was financial support for medical students).
Trained primarily in physiology, Helmholtz wrote on many other topics, ranging from theoretical physics to the age of the Earth, and to the origin of the Solar System.
University postsEdit
Helmholtz's first academic position was as a teacher of anatomy at the Academy of Arts in Berlin in 1848.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He then moved to take a post of associate professor of physiology at the Prussian University of Königsberg, where he was appointed in 1849. In 1855 he accepted a full professorship of anatomy and physiology at the University of Bonn. He was not particularly happy in Bonn, however, and three years later he transferred to the University of Heidelberg, in Baden, where he served as professor of physiology. In 1871 he accepted his final university position, as professor of physics at the Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin.
ResearchEdit
MechanicsEdit
His first important scientific achievement, an 1847 treatise on the conservation of energy, was written in the context of his medical studies and philosophical background. His work on energy conservation came about while studying muscle metabolism. He tried to demonstrate that no energy is lost in muscle movement, motivated by the implication that there were no vital forces necessary to move a muscle. This was a rejection of the speculative tradition of Naturphilosophie and vitalism which was at that time a dominant philosophical paradigm in German physiology. He was working against the argument, promoted by some vitalists, that "living force" can power a machine indefinitely.<ref name="Patton">Patton, Lydia. "Hermann von Helmholtz." (2008), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.</ref>
Drawing on the earlier work of Sadi Carnot, Benoît Paul Émile Clapeyron and James Prescott Joule, he postulated a relationship between mechanics, heat, light, electricity and magnetism by treating them all as manifestations of a single force, or energy in today's terminology. He published his theories in his book Über die Erhaltung der Kraft (On the Conservation of Force, 1847).<ref>English translation published in Scientific memoirs, selected from the transactions of foreign academies of science, and from foreign journals: Natural philosophy (1853), p. 114; trans. by John Tyndall. Google Books, HathiTrust</ref>
In the 1850s and 60s, building on the publications of William Thomson, Helmholtz and William Rankine helped popularize the idea of the heat death of the universe.
In fluid dynamics, Helmholtz made several contributions, including Helmholtz's theorems for vortex dynamics in inviscid fluids.
- Helmholtz-1.jpg
1889 copy of Helmholtz's "Über die Erhaltung der Kraft", no. 1
- Helmholtz-2.jpg
Title page of "Über die Erhaltung der Kraft", no. 1
- Helmholtz-3.jpg
First page of "Über die Erhaltung der Kraft", no. 1
Sensory physiologyEdit
Helmholtz was a pioneer in the scientific study of human vision and audition. Inspired by psychophysics, he was interested in the relationships between measurable physical stimuli and their correspondent human perceptions. For example, the amplitude of a sound wave can be varied, causing the sound to appear louder or softer, but a linear step in sound pressure amplitude does not result in a linear step in perceived loudness. The physical sound needs to be increased exponentially in order for equal steps to seem linear, a fact that is used in current electronic devices to control volume. Helmholtz paved the way in experimental studies on the relationship between the physical energy (physics) and its appreciation (psychology), with the goal in mind to develop "psychophysical laws".
The sensory physiology of Helmholtz was the basis of the work of Wilhelm Wundt, Helmholtz's student, who is considered one of the founders of experimental psychology. More explicitly than Helmholtz, Wundt described his research as a form of empirical philosophy and as a study of the mind as something separate. Helmholtz had, in his early repudiation of Naturphilosophie, stressed the importance of materialism, and was focusing more on the unity of "mind" and body.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Ophthalmic opticsEdit
In 1851, Helmholtz revolutionized the field of ophthalmology with the invention of the ophthalmoscope; an instrument used to examine the inside of the human eye. This made him world-famous overnight. Helmholtz's interests at that time were increasingly focused on the physiology of the senses. His main publication, titled Handbuch der Physiologischen Optik (Handbook of Physiological Optics or Treatise on Physiological Optics; English translation of the 3rd volume here), provided empirical theories on depth perception, colour vision, and motion perception, and became the fundamental reference work in his field during the second half of the nineteenth century. In the third and final volume, published in 1867, Helmholtz described the importance of unconscious inferences for perception. The Handbuch was first translated into English under the editorship of James P. C. Southall on behalf of the Optical Society of America in 1924–5. His theory of accommodation went unchallenged until the final decade of the 20th century.
Helmholtz continued to work for several decades on several editions of the handbook, frequently updating his work because of his dispute with Ewald Hering who held opposite views on spatial and colour vision. This dispute divided the discipline of physiology during the second half of the 1800s.
Nerve physiologyEdit
In 1849, while at Königsberg, Helmholtz measured the speed at which the signal is carried along a nerve fibre. At that time most people believed that nerve signals passed along nerves immeasurably fast.<ref name="glynn">Template:Cite book</ref> He used a recently dissected sciatic nerve of a frog and the calf muscle to which it attached. He used a galvanometer as a sensitive timing device, attaching a mirror to the needle to reflect a light beam across the room to a scale which gave much greater sensitivity.<ref name="glynn"/> Helmholtz reported<ref>Helmholtz, Hermann von (1850).Vorläufiger Bericht über die Fortpflanzungs-Geschwindigkeit der Nervenreizung. In: Archiv für Anatomie, Physiologie und wissenschaftliche Medicin. Veit & Comp., pp. 71–73. MPIWG Berlin</ref><ref>Helmholtz, Hermann von (1850). Messungen über den zeitlichen Verlauf der Zuckung animalischer Muskeln und die Fortpflanzungsgeschwindigkeit der Reizung in den Nerven. In: Archiv für Anatomie, Physiologie und wissenschaftliche Medicin. Veit & Comp., pp. 276–364. MPIWG Berlin</ref> transmission speeds in the range of 24.6 – 38.4 meters per second.<ref name="glynn"/>
Acoustics and aestheticsEdit
In 1863, Helmholtz published Sensations of Tone, once again demonstrating his interest in the physics of perception. This book influenced musicologists into the twentieth century. Helmholtz invented the Helmholtz resonator to identify the various frequencies or pitches of the pure sine wave components of complex sounds containing multiple tones.<ref name="Helmholtz1885">Template:Cite book</ref>
Helmholtz showed that different combinations of resonators could mimic vowel sounds: Alexander Graham Bell in particular was interested in this but, not being able to read German, misconstrued Helmholtz's diagrams as meaning that Helmholtz had transmitted multiple frequencies by wire—which would allow multiplexing of telegraph signals—whereas, in reality, electrical power was used only to keep the resonators in motion. Bell failed to reproduce what he thought Helmholtz had done but later said that, had he been able to read German, he would not have gone on to invent the telephone on the harmonic telegraph principle.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="MacKenzie2008">MacKenzie 2003, p. 41.</ref><ref>Groundwater 2005, p. 31.</ref><ref>Shulman 2008, pp. 46–48.</ref>
The translation by Alexander J. Ellis was first published in 1875 (the first English edition was from the 1870 third German edition; Ellis's second English edition from the 1877 fourth German edition was published in 1885; the 1895 and 1912 third and fourth English editions were reprints of the second).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
ElectromagnetismEdit
Helmholtz studied electrical oscillations from 1869 to 1871, and in a lecture delivered to the Naturhistorisch-medizinischen Verein zu Heidelberg (Natural History and Medical Association of Heidelberg) on 30 April 1869, titled On Electrical Oscillations, he indicated that the perceptible damped electrical oscillations in a coil connected to a Leyden jar were about Template:Frac second in duration.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
In 1871, Helmholtz moved from Heidelberg to Berlin to become a professor of physics. He became interested in electromagnetism, and the Helmholtz equation is named for him. Although he made no major contributions to this field, his student Heinrich Rudolf Hertz became famous as the first to demonstrate electromagnetic radiation. Oliver Heaviside criticised Helmholtz's electromagnetic theory because it allowed the existence of longitudinal waves. Based on work on Maxwell's equations, Heaviside pronounced that longitudinal waves could not exist in a vacuum or a homogeneous medium. Heaviside did not note, however, that longitudinal electromagnetic waves can exist at a boundary or in an enclosed space.<ref>John D. Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics, Template:ISBN.</ref>
PhilosophyEdit
Helmholtz's scientific work in physiology and mechanics occasioned much that he is known for in philosophy of science, including ideas on the relation between the laws of perception and the laws of nature and his rejection of the exclusive use of Euclidean geometry.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
His philosophy of science wavered between some version of empiricism and transcendentalism.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Despite the speculative associations of the latter, his philosophy of science is thoroughly indebted to his use of mathematical physics to supplant vitalism and articulate the general conservation of energy principle.<ref name="Patton"/>
His rejection of Euclidean geometry as the only possible science of space is central to understanding his appropriation of Kant's philosophy of space, which ostensibly requires Euclidean geometry to be that exclusive a priori science of physical space. Helmholtz introduced a new conception of the a priori in space: that of the determination of the manifold of possible orientations in perceptual space. These developments inspired new readings of Kant<ref name="Patton"/> and contributed to the rise of late modern neo-Kantianism movement in philosophy.
Students and associatesEdit
Other students and research associates of Helmholtz at Berlin included Max Planck, Heinrich Kayser, Eugen Goldstein, Wilhelm Wien, Arthur König, Henry Augustus Rowland, Albert A. Michelson, Wilhelm Wundt, Fernando Sanford, Arthur Gordon Webster and Michael I. Pupin. Leo Koenigsberger, who was his colleague from 1869 to 1871 in Heidelberg, wrote the definitive biography of him in 1902.
Honours and legacyEdit
- In 1873, Helmholtz was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- In 1881, Helmholtz was elected Honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- On 10 November 1881, he was awarded the Légion d'honneur: au grade de Commandeur, or Level 3 – a senior grade. (No. 2173).
- In 1883, Professor Helmholtz was honoured by the Emperor, being raised to the nobility, or Adel. The Adelung meant that he and his family were now styled: von Helmholtz. The distinction was not a peerage or title, but it was hereditary and conferred a certain social cachet.
- Helmholtz was conferred the Honorary Membership of the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland in 1884.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- The largest German association of research institutions, the Helmholtz Association, is named after him.<ref name="Gemeinschaft"/><ref name=History>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- The asteroid 11573 Helmholtz and the lunar crater Helmholtz as well as the crater Helmholtz on Mars were named in his honour.<ref name="Asteroid" /><ref>Template:GPN</ref><ref>Template:GPN</ref>
- In Charlottenburg, Berlin, the street Helmholtzstraße is named after von Helmholtz.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
WorksEdit
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
Translated worksEdit
- On the Conservation of Force (1847) HathiTrust
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- On the Conservation of Force (1895) Introduction to a Series of Lectures Delivered at Carlsruhe in the Winter of 1862–1863, English translation
- On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music (downloadable from California Digital Library) Third Edition of English Translation, based on Fourth German Edition of 1877, By Hermann von Helmholtz, Alexander John Ellis, Published by Longmans, Green, 1895, 576 pages
- On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music (downloadable from Google Books) Fourth Edition, By Hermann von Helmholtz, Alexander John Ellis, Published by Longmans, Green, 1912, 575 pages
- Treatise on Physiological Optics (1910) three volumes. English translation by Optical Society of America (1924–25).
- Popular lectures on scientific subjects (1885)
- Popular lectures on scientific subjects second series (1908)
See alsoEdit
- Helmholtz coil
- List of people from Berlin
- List of things named after Hermann von Helmholtz
- Neo-Kantianism
- Theory of Colours
ReferencesEdit
CitationsEdit
SourcesEdit
- Cahan, David Helmholtz: A Life in Science. University of Chicago Press, 2018. Template:ISBN.
- Cohen, Robert, and Wartofsky, Marx, eds. and trans. Reidel. Helmholtz: Epistemological Writings, 1977.
- Ewald, William B., ed. From Kant to Hilbert: A Source Book in the Foundations of Mathematics, 2 vols. Oxford Uni. Press, 1996.
- 1876. "The origin and meaning of geometrical axioms", 663–88.
- 1878. "The facts in perception", 698–726.
- 1887. "Numbering and measuring from an epistemological viewpoint", 727–52.
- Groundwater, Jennifer. Alexander Graham Bell: The Spirit of Invention. Calgary: Altitude Publishing, 2005. Template:ISBN.
- Jackson, Myles W. Harmonious Triads: Physicists, Musicians, and Instrument Makers in Nineteenth-Century Germany (MIT Press, 2006).
- Kahl, Russell, ed. Wesleyan. Selected Writings of Hermann von Helmholtz, Uni. Press., 1971.
- Koenigsberger, Leo. Hermann von Helmholtz, translated by Frances A. Welby (Dover, 1965)
- MacKenzie, Catherine. Alexander Graham Bell. Whitefish, Montana: Kessinger Publishing, 2003. Template:ISBN. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
- Shulman, Seth. The Telephone Gambit: Chasing Alexander Bell's Secret. New York: Norton & Company, 2008. Template:ISBN.
Further readingEdit
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- David Cahan: Helmholtz: A Life in Science (University of Chicago, 2018). Template:ISBN
- Steven Shapin, "A Theorist of (Not Quite) Everything" (review of David Cahan, Helmholtz: A Life in Science, University of Chicago Press, 2018, Template:ISBN, 937 pp.), The New York Review of Books, vol. 66, no. 15 (10 October 2019), pp. 29–31.
- David Cahan (Ed.): Hermann von Helmholtz and the Foundations of Nineteenth-Century Science. Univ. California, Berkeley 1994, Template:ISBN.
- Gregor Schiemann: Hermann von Helmholtz's Mechanism: The Loss of Certainty. A Study on the Transition from Classical to Modern Philosophy of Nature. Dordrecht: Springer 2009, Template:ISBN.
- Franz Werner: Hermann Helmholtz´ Heidelberger Jahre (1858–1871). (= Sonderveröffentlichungen des Stadtarchivs Heidelberg 8). Mit 52 Abbildungen. Berlin / Heidelberg (Springer) 1997.
- Kenneth L. Caneva: Helmholtz and the Conservation of Energy: Contexts of Creation and Reception. The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2021, ISBN 978-0-262-04573-5
External linksEdit
Template:Sister project Template:Sister projectTemplate:Namespace detect Template:Sister project
- "Hermann von Helmholtz" (Obituary). Royal Society (Great Britain). (1894). Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. London: Printed by Taylor and Francis. p. xvii.
- "Hermann von Helmholtz" in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, written by Lydia Patton
- Template:FamilySearch
- Template:MacTutor
- Biography, bibliography and access to digital sources in the Virtual Laboratory of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
- Template:IMSLP (Die Lehre von den Tonempfindungen)
- Helmholtz's (1867) Handbuch der physiologischen Optik Template:Webarchive – digital facsimile from the Linda Hall Library
- Template:MathGenealogy
- Template:Librivox author
Template:Copley Medallists 1851-1900 Template:Authority control