Why does Greiner call them theorems?

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In summary: Second, immediately below the last of his four premises, Greiner comments that "the velocity independence of mass [is] lost in the special theory of relativity". That strongly suggests to me that he's building up to using relativistic mass, which is very much a deprecated concept. Most modern writers use "mass" to mean the invariant mass, and "total energy" to mean the relativistic mass - so be wary.In summary, the Newtonian or classical mechanics is governed by three axioms - the law of inertia, the fundamental equation of dynamics, and the interaction law - which are not independent of each other. In addition, there are
  • #1
Jiman
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The Newtonian1or classical mechanics is governed by three axioms, which are not inde-pendent of each other:
1. the law of inertia, 2. the fundamental equation of dynamics, 3. the interaction law, and as a supplement: the theorems on independence concerning the superposition of forces and of motions.
 
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  • #2
Jiman said:
The Newtonian1or classical mechanics is governed by three axioms, which are not inde-pendent of each other:
1. the law of inertia, 2. the fundamental equation of dynamics, 3. the interaction law, and as a supplement: the theorems on independence concerning the superposition of forces and of motions.
What exactly is the question here? And is there any more context to that quote (I assume you are quoting a textbook)?
 
  • #3
Isaac0427 said:
What exactly is the question here? And is there any more context to that quote (I assume you are quoting a textbook)?
"the theorems on independence concerning the superposition of forces and of motions."
Why don't Greiner(German physicist) call them the principal of superposition of forces and the principal of superposition of motions?
Why Greiner call them theroms?
 
  • #4
Where are you reading this at/from? Is it from a book or an online article?
 
  • #5
Drakkith said:
Where are you reading this at/from? Is it from a book or an online article?
Screenshot_20200719_143856.jpg

on page134
 
  • #6
Jiman said:
"the theorems on independence concerning the superposition of forces and of motions."
Why don't Greiner(German physicist) call them the principal of superposition of forces and the principal of superposition of motions?
Why Greiner call them theroms?
This seems like semantics, but looking at the book, I think he is talking about the theorems regarding vector addition (i.e. components of vectors add independently). Under "lex quarta" he mentions that it is postulated that forces add as vectors, so I can only assume that he is referring to the theorems/properties of vector addition.

Regardless, he is saying that Newtonian mechanics relies on the principles of vector addition. It doesn't really matter what he labels them as.
 
  • #7
Isaac0427 said:
This seems like semantics, but looking at the book, I think he is talking about the theorems regarding vector addition (i.e. components of vectors add independently). Under "lex quarta" he mentions that it is postulated that forces add as vectors, so I can only assume that he is referring to the theorems/properties of vector addition.

Regardless, he is saying that Newtonian mechanics relies on the principles of vector addition. It doesn't really matter what he labels them as.
“the theorems on independence concerning the superposition of forces and of motions.”the principal of superposition of forces is a physical assumption
Is the principal of superposition of motions also a physical assumption?
 
  • #8
Isaac0427 said:
This seems like semantics, but looking at the book, I think he is talking about the theorems regarding vector addition (i.e. components of vectors add independently). Under "lex quarta" he mentions that it is postulated that forces add as vectors, so I can only assume that he is referring to the theorems/properties of vector addition.

Regardless, he is saying that Newtonian mechanics relies on the principles of vector addition. It doesn't really matter what he labels them as.
Is the principal of superposition of motions pure mathematical method?
 
  • #9
Isaac0427 said:
Under "lex quarta" he mentions that it is postulated that forces add as vectors, so I can only assume that he is referring to the theorems/properties of vector addition.
In fact, he explicitly uses the word "principles" in this paragraph.
Greiner said:
Thereby the superposition principle of the actions of forces is postulated (principle of unperturbed superposition).
So I agree it's just semantics.

Side note: I've only read pages 134 and 135 of this book, and there are already two points I'd take issue with. First, Greiner's "Premises of Newtonian mechanics" #2 says that Newtonian mechanics uses a concept of absolute space. I don't think that's true. I think Newton did believe in an undetectable absolute rest frame, but to write that in 1989 without commenting that there's no useful difference between "there exists an undetectable absolute rest frame" and "there is no absolute rest frame" is very poor in my opinion. Second, immediately below the last of his four premises, Greiner comments that "the velocity independence of mass [is] lost in the special theory of relativity". That strongly suggests to me that he's building up to using relativistic mass, which is very much a deprecated concept. Most modern writers use "mass" to mean the invariant mass, and "total energy" to mean the relativistic mass - so be wary.
 
  • #10
Ibix said:
In fact, he explicitly uses the word "principles" in this paragraph.

So I agree it's just semantics.

Side note: I've only read pages 134 and 135 of this book, and there are already two points I'd take issue with. First, Greiner's "Premises of Newtonian mechanics" #2 says that Newtonian mechanics uses a concept of absolute space. I don't think that's true. I think Newton did believe in an undetectable absolute rest frame, but to write that in 1989 without commenting that there's no useful difference between "there exists an undetectable absolute rest frame" and "there is no absolute rest frame" is very poor in my opinion. Second, immediately below the last of his four premises, Greiner comments that "the velocity independence of mass [is] lost in the special theory of relativity". That strongly suggests to me that he's building up to using relativistic mass, which is very much a deprecated concept. Most modern writers use "mass" to mean the invariant mass, and "total energy" to mean the relativistic mass - so be wary.
Could you recommend me a more authoritative textbook?Thank you very much!
 
  • #11
Jiman said:
mechanics is governed by three axioms, which are not inde-pendent of each other:
not three, more axioms, and they are independent
V Arnold Math methods of classical mechanics
 
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  • #12
Ibix said:
In fact, he explicitly uses the word "principles" in this paragraph.

So I agree it's just semantics.

Side note: I've only read pages 134 and 135 of this book, and there are already two points I'd take issue with. First, Greiner's "Premises of Newtonian mechanics" #2 says that Newtonian mechanics uses a concept of absolute space. I don't think that's true. I think Newton did believe in an undetectable absolute rest frame, but to write that in 1989 without commenting that there's no useful difference between "there exists an undetectable absolute rest frame" and "there is no absolute rest frame" is very poor in my opinion. Second, immediately below the last of his four premises, Greiner comments that "the velocity independence of mass [is] lost in the special theory of relativity". That strongly suggests to me that he's building up to using relativistic mass, which is very much a deprecated concept. Most modern writers use "mass" to mean the invariant mass, and "total energy" to mean the relativistic mass - so be wary.
Is the principal of superposition of motions also a physical assumption?
 
  • #13
wrobel said:
not three, more axioms, and they are independent
V Arnold Math methods of classical mechanics
Why are there so many mistakes in the book?
 
  • #14
Mistakes in Arnold? It's likely to have typos in any book, but real mistakes in Arnold? I doubt it.

Concerning the question about "Newton's axioms", one should know the history of Greiner's textbooks. They are meant to be used by students who start the general theory course already in the 1st semester, which was a novum at German universities at the time the books are written. I remember too well, how disappointed I was when I started to study physics at the university that theoretical physics was supposed to start in the 3rd semester only. But that were the good old times before the socalled "Bologna reform" on European universities, so you were free to do whatever you want, you only had to pass the "Vordiplom" exams after 2 years and the "Diplom" exams at the end. How you got the knowledge to do so nobody cared. So I went in the 3rd-semester theory lectures as a freshman. Greiner's books were among the best sources to read about all the many things I couldn't understand lacking 2 semesters preparation for theory through math and experimental physics lectures (which of course I also attended ;-)).

In such a situation you have to use an "inductive" approach, often using the "historical approach", i.e., to follow more or less the development of the subject as it was in history, which of course has to be cleaned up by all the thorny failures in getting to the modern understanding.

After having learned the (theoretical) physics in the inductive approach, it's also good to have a deductive point of view, i.e., you start from some real "axioms" and develop the phenomenology from that. Then you can state the Newtonian postulates (I'd no call them axioms) simply by defining the spacetime model to be the Galilei-Newton spacetime, which is a bundle of Euclidean spaces along a directed 1D time continuum, leading to the notion of Newton's "absolute space" as being defined by the equivalence classes of inertial frames, which exist by assumption. In the taste of 20th century physics, based on 19th century geometric views culminated in Klein's Erlanger Programm, you can (and in my opinion) should analyze it using group theory and symmetry analysis.

So why is the lex quarta valid: Simply because it is hypothesized within the choice of a spacetime model! Now one can think, how to interpret Newton's famous saying: "Hypothesis non fingo" ;-))).
 
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  • #15
vanhees71 said:
Mistakes in Arnold? It's likely to have typos in any book, but real mistakes in Arnold? I doubt it.

Concerning the question about "Newton's axioms", one should know the history of Greiner's textbooks. They are meant to be used by students who start the general theory course already in the 1st semester, which was a novum at German universities at the time the books are written. I remember too well, how disappointed I was when I started to study physics at the university that theoretical physics was supposed to start in the 3rd semester only. But that were the good old times before the socalled "Bologna reform" on European universities, so you were free to do whatever you want, you only had to pass the "Vordiplom" exams after 2 years and the "Diplom" exams at the end. How you got the knowledge to do so nobody cared. So I went in the 3rd-semester theory lectures as a freshman. Greiner's books were among the best sources to read about all the many things I couldn't understand lacking 2 semesters preparation for theory through math and experimental physics lectures (which of course I also attended ;-)).

In such a situation you have to use an "inductive" approach, often using the "historical approach", i.e., to follow more or less the development of the subject as it was in history, which of course has to be cleaned up by all the thorny failures in getting to the modern understanding.

After having learned the (theoretical) physics in the inductive approach, it's also good to have a deductive point of view, i.e., you start from some real "axioms" and develop the phenomenology from that. Then you can state the Newtonian postulates (I'd no call them axioms) simply by defining the spacetime model to be the Galilei-Newton spacetime, which is a bundle of Euclidean spaces along a directed 1D time continuum, leading to the notion of Newton's "absolute space" as being defined by the equivalence classes of inertial frames, which exist by assumption. In the taste of 20th century physics, based on 19th century geometric views culminated in Klein's Erlanger Programm, you can (and in my opinion) should analyze it using group theory and symmetry analysis.

So why is the lex quarta valid: Simply because it is hypothesized within the choice of a spacetime model! Now one can think, how to interpret Newton's famous saying: "Hypothesis non fingo" ;-))).
Newton's parallelogram law is only mathematical method without physical significants,right?
 
  • #16
wrobel said:
not three, more axioms, and they are independent
V Arnold Math methods of classical mechanics
Newton's parallelogram law is only mathematical method without physical significants,right?
 

1. Why does Greiner call them theorems?

Greiner calls them theorems because they are statements that have been proven to be true using logical reasoning and mathematical evidence.

2. What is the purpose of calling them theorems?

The purpose of calling them theorems is to distinguish them from other types of statements, such as conjectures or definitions, and to emphasize their significance as proven truths in mathematics.

3. How does Greiner determine if something is a theorem?

Greiner determines if something is a theorem by carefully examining the logical structure and evidence supporting the statement, and ensuring that it follows the rules and principles of mathematical reasoning.

4. Are all mathematical statements considered theorems?

No, not all mathematical statements are considered theorems. Theorems are a specific type of statement that have been rigorously proven to be true, while other statements may be conjectures, definitions, or unproven hypotheses.

5. What is the significance of calling something a theorem?

Calling something a theorem indicates that it has been proven to be true using logical reasoning and mathematical evidence, and therefore holds a higher level of significance and validity in the field of mathematics.

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