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Published December 2022 | public
Journal Article

Reichenbach's empirical axiomatization of relativity

Abstract

A well known conception of axiomatization has it that an axiomatized theory must be interpreted, or otherwise coordinated with reality, in order to acquire empirical content. An early version of this account is often ascribed to key figures in the logical empiricist movement, and to central figures in the early "formalist" tradition in mathematics as well. In this context, Reichenbach's "coordinative definitions" are regarded as investing abstract propositions with empirical significance. We argue that over-emphasis on the abstract elements of this approach fails to appreciate a rich tradition of empirical axiomatization in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, evident in particular in the work of Moritz Pasch, Heinrich Hertz, David Hilbert, and Reichenbach himself. We claim that such over-emphasis leads to a misunderstanding of the role of empirical facts in Reichenbach's approach to the axiomatization of a physical theory, and of the role of Reichenbach's coordinative definitions in particular.

Additional Information

We are grateful for detailed comments on earlier drafts of this paper by Alison Fernandes and James Read, as well as to generous and helpful comments by anonymous reviewers for this journal. Our thanks also to Erik Curiel and Flavia Padovani for their discerning editorship of this Special Issue and for their editorial guidance.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023