| Relative of Ingeborg Brigitte Gastel
PLANCK, MAX (1858-1947), German physicist, discoverer of the
quantum of action, also called Planck's constant. Born in Kiel, Planck
studied physics and mathematics at the University of Munich under Philipp
von Jolly and at the University of Berlin under Hermann von Helmholtz and
Gustav Kirchhoff. After receiving his Ph.D. at Munich (1879), first in
Kiel, then (starting in 1889) in Berlin, as Kirchhoff's successor. "In
those days," he wrote later, "I was the only theoretican, a physicist sui
generis,
as it were, and this circumstance did not make my debut
so easy."
At this time Planck made important, and indeed quite fundamental, contributions
to the understanding of the phenomena of heat, but he received hardly any
attention from the scientific community: "Helmholtz probably did not read
my paper at all. Kirchhoff expressly disapproved of its contents." The
spotlight was then on the controversy between Ludwig Boltzmann and the
Wilhelm Ostwald- Georg Helm - Ernst Mach camp, which supported a purely
phenomenological theory of heat. It was via this controversy, and not because
of the force of his arguments, that Planck's ideas were finally accepted.
"This experience," he wrote, "gave me an oppontunity to learn a remarkable
fact: a new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents
and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually
die." Nevertheless, the discovery of the quantum of action in 1900 ( see
QUANTUM
MECHANICS, PHILOSOPHICAL IMMPLICATIONS OF), for which Planck received
the Nobel prize in physics (1918), was a direct result of these earlier
studies. In 1912 Planck became permanent secretary of the (then) Prussian
Academy of Sciences, a post which he retained with only minor interruptions
for the rest of his life. He used this position with excellent judgement
for furthering the international collaboration of all scientists. From
1930 to 1935 he was president of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut, which later
became the Max-Planck-Institut.
Politically Planck was conservative, loyal to the Prussian ideas of
the state and of honor, and loyal to Wilhelm II. During World War I he
more than once expressed his devotion to the cause of the German people
united in battle, and he received the order of ,,pour le merrite," one
of the highest orders of Wilhelm's Germany. However, he opposed the Nazi
regime. He defended Einstein, first against his scientifc opponents. then
against his political enemies. Despite severe criticism by Johannes Stark,
Phillip Lenard, and Ernst Müller, he continued to defend Einstein
and other Jewish scientists (such as Walther Nernat) even after 1933. He
later personally demanded of Hitler that those scientists who had been
imprisoned be freed; as a consequence he was removed as president of the
Physical Society, was refused the Goethe Prize of the city of Frankfurt
(he was awarded it after the war, in 1946), and finally was forced to witness
the execution of his only son, who had been connected with the German resistance.
Antiquated as some of his political ideas may have been, he nevertheless
put individual justice above all and defended it even at the risk of his
own life. At the end of the war he was rescued by the Allied Forces. He
spent the last years of his life in Goettingen.
Approach to science. Planck's research was guided by his belief
"of the existence in nature of something real, and independent of human
measurement." He considered "the search for the absolute" to be the highest
goal of science. ,, "Our everyday starting point," he explained, "must
necessarily be something relative. The material that goes into our instruments
varies according to our geographical source; their construction depends
on the skill of the designers and toolmakers; their manipulation is contingent
on the special purposes pursued by the experimenter. Our task is to find
in all these factors and data, the absolute, the universally valid, the
invariant that is hidden in them." This point of view was not allowed to
remain in a philosophical luxury, without influence upon the procedures
of physics. One of the main objections which Planck raised against the
positivistic creed was its sterility in the promotion of theory. Positivism
lacks the driving force for serving as a leader on the road of research.
True, it is able to eliminate obstacles, but it cannot turn them into productive
factors For ... its glance is directed backwards. But progress, advancement
requires new associations of ideas and new queries, not based on the result
of measurement alone."
Scientific discoveries. Of new ideas Planck himself produced
essentially two. He recognized and clearly formulated those properties
of heat which separate it from purely mechanical processes, and he introduced
and applied to concrete problems the idea of an atomistic structure not
only of matter but of radiation also. In his doctoral dissertation he had
already separated thermodynamic irreversibility from mechanical processes
and had interpreted Rudolf Clausius entropy as its measure. Later he showed
(independently of Willard Gibbs) that "all the laws of physical and chemical
equilibrium follow from a knowledge of entropy." His conviction that the
principle of the increase of entropy was a genuine and independent physical
law and his belief in the universal (or, to use his term, "absolute" validity
of all physical laws led him to apply thermo dynamic reasoning in domains
which until then had been regarded as inaccessible to it. For example,
he determined that the lowering of the freezing point of dilute solutions
could be explained only by a dissociation of the substances dissolved,
thus extending the science of thermodynamics to electrically charged particles.
This tendency to strain laws to the limit rather than to restrict them
to the domain of their strongest evidence caused a temporary clash with
Boltzmann, who was quite unperturbed by the fact that in his approach the
entropy of a system could both increase and decrease. But it also led to
Planck's greatest triumph -his discovery of the quantum of action. He was
the only one to correlate the relevant features of radiation with the entropy,
rather than the temperature, of the radiant body. "While a host of outstanding
physicists worked on the problem of spectral energy distribution, both
from the experimental and theoretical aspect, every one of them directed
his efforts solely towards exhibiting the dependence of the intensity of
radiation on the temperature. On the other hand I suspected that the fundamental
connexion lies in the dependence of entropy upon energy. As the significance
of the concept of entropy had not yet come to be fully appreciated, nobody
paid attention to the method adopted by me, and I could work out it my
calculations completely at my leisure." These calculations furnished a
formula which agreed with experiment and contained the existing theoretical
results (Wien's formula and the Rayleigh-Jeans law) as limiting
cases. In the attempt to find a rationale for this result, Planck utilized
Boltzmann's statistical interpretation of entropy and was thus led to the
discovery of the "atomic," or discontinuous structure of action (energy).
Realism, determinism, and religion. The discovery ofthe quantum
of action was brought about not only by the specific physical arguments
used but also by the philosophical belief in the existence of a real world
behaving in accordance with immutable laws The intellectual climate of
the late nineteenth century was opposed to such a belief Boltzmann was
almost the only other figure to uphold it. This climate not only found
expression in the philosophical superstructure but influenced physical
practice itself. Laws were regarded as summaries of experimental results
and were applied only where such results were available. However, it was
the "metaphysics'" of Planck. Boltzmann and later on, Einstein (whom Planck
interpreted as a realist from the very beginning) which made possible many
of the theories that are now frequently used to attack realism and other
,,metaphysical" principles.
Planck never accepteel the positivistic interpretation of the
quantum theory. He distinguished between what he called the "world picture"
of physics and the "sensory world," identifying the former with the formalism
of the Y waves, the latter with experimental results. The fact that the
Y-function obeys the Schrödinger equation enabled him to say that
while the sensory world might show indeterministic features, the world
picture, even of the new physics, did not. His belief in the existenceof
objective laws also provided him with an important steppingstone to religious
belief. Planck argued that the laws of nature are not invented in the minds
of men; on the contrary, external factors force us to recognize them. Some
of these laws such as the principle of least action, "exhibit a rational
world order" and thereby reveal "an omnipotent reason which rules over
nature." He concluded that there is no contradiction between religion and
natural science; rather, they supplement and condition each other.
Works by Planck:
Theory of Heat Radiation, translated by Morton Masius.
Philadelphia,
1914; 2d ed., New York, 1959.
Eight Lectures on Theoretical Physics, translated by A. P
Wills.
New York, 1915. Lectures given at Columbia University in 1909.
The Origin and Development of the Quantum Theory. translated
by
H.T. Clarke and L. Silberstein. Oxford, 1922. Nobel Prize address.
A Survey of Physics; A Collection of Lectures and Essays, translated
by
B. Jones and D.H. Williams, London, 1925. Reissued as A Survey
of Physical Theory. New York, 1960.
Treatise on Thermodynamics, translated by Alexander Ogg. London,
1927; 34 rev. ed., New York, 1945.
Introduction to Theoretical Physics, translated by
Henry L. Brose, 5 vols. London, 1932-1933; New York. 1949. Includes
General
Mechanics, The Mechanics of Deformable Bodies, Theory of Electricity and
Magnetism, Theory of Light, and Theory of Heat.
Scientific Autobiography and Other Papers, translated
by
Frank Gaynor. New York, 1949.
The New Science, translated by James Murphy and W.
Fr. Johnston, New York, 1959. Includes Where Is Science Going?
a defense of determinism with a preface by Albert Einstein), The Universe
in the Light of Modern Physics, and The Philosophy of Physics.
Works on Planck:
Schlick, Moritz, "Positivism and Realism," in A. J. Ayer,
Co., Logical Positivism, Glencoe, III., 1959. This essay was a direct
reply to the criticisms of positivism that Planck expressed in Positivismus
und reale Aussenwelt, Leipzig, 1931.
Vogel, H... Zum philosophischen Wirken Max Plancks, Berlin,
1961. Excellent biography with detailed bibliography.
PAUL K. FEYERABEND |