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Hermann Grassmann

Hermann Günther Grassmann (German: Graßmann, pronounced [ˈhɛɐman ˈɡʏntʰɐ ˈɡʁasman]; 15 April 1809 – 26 September 1877) was a German polymath known in his day as a linguist and now also as a mathematician. He was also a physicist, general scholar, and publisher. His mathematical work was little noted until he was in his sixties. His work preceded and exceeded the concept which is now known as a vector space. He introduced the Grassmannian, the space which parameterizes all k-dimensional linear subspaces of an n-dimensional vector space V. In linguistics he helped free language history and structure from each other.

"Grassmann" redirects here. For the surname, see Grassmann (surname).

Hermann Günther Grassmann

(1809-04-15)15 April 1809

26 September 1877(1877-09-26) (aged 68)

Stettin, German Empire

Biography[edit]

Hermann Grassmann was the third of 12 children of Justus Günter Grassmann, an ordained minister who taught mathematics and physics at the Stettin Gymnasium, where Hermann was educated.


Grassmann was an undistinguished student until he obtained a high mark on the examinations for admission to Prussian universities. Beginning in 1827, he studied theology at the University of Berlin, also taking classes in classical languages, philosophy, and literature. He does not appear to have taken courses in mathematics or physics.


Although lacking university training in mathematics, it was the field that most interested him when he returned to Stettin in 1830 after completing his studies in Berlin. After a year of preparation, he sat the examinations needed to teach mathematics in a gymnasium, but achieved a result good enough to allow him to teach only at the lower levels. Around this time, he made his first significant mathematical discoveries, ones that led him to the important ideas he set out in his 1844 paper Die lineale Ausdehnungslehre, ein neuer Zweig der Mathematik, here referred to as A1, later revised in 1862 as Die Ausdehnungslehre: Vollständig und in strenger Form bearbeitet, here referred to as A2.


In 1834 Grassmann began teaching mathematics at the Gewerbeschule in Berlin. A year later, he returned to Stettin to teach mathematics, physics, German, Latin, and religious studies at a new school, the Otto Schule. Over the next four years, Grassmann passed examinations enabling him to teach mathematics, physics, chemistry, and mineralogy at all secondary school levels.


In 1847, he was made an "Oberlehrer" or head teacher. In 1852, he was appointed to his late father's position at the Stettin Gymnasium, thereby acquiring the title of Professor. In 1847, he asked the Prussian Ministry of Education to be considered for a university position, whereupon that Ministry asked Ernst Kummer for his opinion of Grassmann. Kummer wrote back saying that Grassmann's 1846 prize essay (see below) contained "commendably good material expressed in a deficient form." Kummer's report ended any chance that Grassmann might obtain a university post. This episode proved the norm; time and again, leading figures of Grassmann's day failed to recognize the value of his mathematics.


Starting during the political turmoil in Germany, 1848–49, Hermann and his brother Robert published a Stettin newspaper, Deutsche Wochenschrift für Staat, Kirche und Volksleben, calling for German unification under a constitutional monarchy. (This eventuated in 1871.) After writing a series of articles on constitutional law, Hermann parted company with the newspaper, finding himself increasingly at odds with its political direction.


Grassmann had eleven children, seven of whom reached adulthood. A son, Hermann Ernst Grassmann, became a professor of mathematics at the University of Giessen.

Linguist[edit]

Grassmann's mathematical ideas began to spread only towards the end of his life. Thirty years after the publication of A1 the publisher wrote to Grassmann: “Your book Die Ausdehnungslehre has been out of print for some time. Since your work hardly sold at all, roughly 600 copies were used in 1864 as waste paper and the remaining few odd copies have now been sold out, with the exception of the one copy in our library.”[4]: 45  Disappointed by the reception of his work in mathematical circles, Grassmann lost his contacts with mathematicians as well as his interest in geometry. In the last years of his life he turned to historical linguistics and the study of Sanskrit. He wrote books on German grammar, collected folk songs, and learned Sanskrit. He wrote a 2,000-page dictionary and a translation of the Rigveda (more than 1,000 pages). In modern studies of the Rigveda, Grassmann's work is often cited. In 1955 a third edition of his dictionary was issued.[4]: 46 


Grassmann also noticed and presented a phonological rule that exists in both Sanskrit and Greek. In his honor, this phonological rule is known as Grassmann's law. His discovery was revolutionary for historical linguistics at the time, as it challenged the widespread notion of Sanskrit as an older predecessor to other Indo-European languages.[9] This was a widespread assumption due to Sanskrit's more agglutinative structure, which languages like Latin and Greek were thought to have passed through to reach their more "modern" synthetic structure. However, Grassman's work proved that, in at least one phonological pattern, German was indeed "older" (i.e., less synthetic) than Sanskrit. This meant that genealogical and typological classifications of languages were at last correctly separated in linguistics, allowing significant progress for later linguists.[10]


These philological accomplishments were honored during his lifetime. He was elected to the American Oriental Society and in 1876 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Tübingen.

A1

Die Lineale Ausdehnungslehre

Grassmann, Hermann (1847). (in German). Leipzig: Weidmannsche Buchhandlung.

Geometrische Analyse

Grassmann, Hermann (1861). . Vol. 1: Arithmetik. Berlin: Adolph Enslin.

Lehrbuch der Mathematik für höhere Lehranstalten

A2

Die Ausdehnungslehre. Vollständig und in strenger Form begründet.

1873. . Leipzig: Brockhaus.

Wörterbuch zum Rig-Veda

1876–1877. Rig-Veda. Leipzig: Brockhaus. Translation in two vols., published 1876, vol. 2 published 1877.

vol. 1

1894–1911. , in 3 vols. Friedrich Engel ed. Leipzig: B.G. Teubner.[11] Reprinted 1972, New York: Johnson.

Gesammelte mathematische und physikalische Werke

Ampère's force law

(Grassmann was its precursor)

Bra–ket notation

Geometric algebra

Multilinear algebra

List of things named after Hermann Grassmann

Browne, John (October 2012). Grassmann Algebra. Vol. I: Foundations. Eltham, Australia: Barnard Publishing.  978-1479197637.

ISBN

Browne, John (August 2020). Multiplanes and Multispheres: Notes on a Grassmann Algebra approach with Mathematica. Eltham, Australia: Barnard Publishing.  979-8657325379.

ISBN

Cantù, Paola (February 13, 2003). [The Mathematics of Quantities to the Science of Forms: The Ausdehnungslehre of H. Grassmann] (PDF) (PhD thesis) (in Italian). University of Genoa.

La matematica da scienza delle grandezze a teoria delle forme: l'Ausdehnungslehre di H. Grassmann

Crowe, Michael J. (1967). A History of Vector Analysis. . ISBN 0-486-64955-5.

University of Notre Dame Press

Fearnley-Sander, Desmond (March 1982). "Hermann Grassmann and the Prehistory of Universal Algebra". The American Mathematical Monthly. 89 (3). Mathematical Association of America: 161–166. :10.2307/2320198. ISSN 0002-9890. JSTOR 2320198.

doi

Fearnley-Sander, Desmond; Stokes, Timothy (1997). "Area in Grassmann Geometry". In Wang, Dongming (ed.). Automated Deduction in Geomtetry. International Workshop on Automated Deduction in Geometry 1996. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 1360. Toulouse, France: Springer. pp. 141–170. :10.1007/BFb0022724. ISBN 978-3-540-69717-6. ISSN 0302-9743.

doi

(2000). The Search for Mathematical Roots, 1870-1940: Logics, Set Theories and the Foundations of Mathematics from Cantor through Russell to Godel. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691058580. JSTOR j.ctt7rp8j.

Grattan-Guinness, Ivor

Petsche, Hans-Joachim (2006). Fellmann, Emil A. (ed.). Graßmann. Vita Mathematica (in German). Vol. 13. Basel, Switzerland: Birkhäuser.  3-7643-7257-5.

ISBN

Petsche, Hans-Joachim (2009). Hermann Graßmann. Translated by Minnes, Mark. Basel, Switzerland: Birkhäuser. :10.1007/978-3-7643-8860-7. ISBN 978-3-7643-8859-1. LCCN 2009929497.

doi

Petsche, Hans-Joachim; Kannenberg, Lloyd C.; Keßler, Gottfried; Liskowacka, Jolanta, eds. (2009). Hermann Graßmann – Roots and Traces. Basel, Switzerland: Birkhäuser. :10.1007/978-3-0346-0155-9. ISBN 978-3-0346-0155-9. LCCN 2009930234.

doi

Petsche, Hans-Joachim; Liesen, Jörg; Lewis, Albert C.; Russ, Steve, eds. (September 2011). From Past to Future: Graßmann's Work in Context. . Potsdam-Szczecin: Birkhäuser. doi:10.1007/978-3-0346-0405-5. ISBN 978-3-0346-0404-8.

Graßmann Bicentennial Conference

Lenke, Peter C.; Petsche, Hans-Joachim, eds. (2010). International Grassmann Conference: Potsdam and Szczecin (DVD). Universitätsverlag Potsdam.  978-3-86956-093-9.

ISBN

(1878). Hermann Grassmann: Sein Leben und seine Werke (in German). Leipzig, Germany: Friedrich Arnold Brockhaus.

Schlegel, Victor

Schubring, Gert, ed. (1996). Hermann Günther Graßmann (1809–1877): Visionary Mathematician, Scientist and Neohumanist Scholar. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Vol. 187. Springer. :10.1007/978-94-015-8753-2. ISBN 978-94-015-8753-2. ISSN 0068-0346.

doi

Note: Extensive online bibliography, revealing substantial contemporary interest in Grassmann's life and work. References each chapter in Schubring.

Robertson, Edmund F.

's home page.

Fearnley-Sander

: From Past to Future: Grassmann's Work in Context

Grassmann Bicentennial Conference (1809 – 1877), September 16 – 19, 2009 Potsdam / Szczecin (DE / PL)

– A compilation of English translations of three notes by Cesare Burali-Forti on the application of Grassmann's exterior algebra to projective geometry

"The Grassmann method in projective geometry"

(English translation of book by an early disciple of Grassmann)

C. Burali-Forti, "Introduction to Differential Geometry, following the method of H. Grassmann"

– An English translation of one Grassmann's papers on the applications of exterior algebra

"Mechanics, according to the principles of the theory of extension"