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“Jeremy Gray is one of the world’s leading historians of mathematics, and an accomplished author of popular science. In Simply Riemann he combines both talents to give us clear and accessible insights into the astonishing discoveries of Bernhard Riemann—a brilliant but enigmatic mathematician who laid the foundations for several major areas of today’s mathematics, and for Albert Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity. Readable, organized—and simple. Highly recommended.”
—Ian Stewart, Emeritus Professor of Mathematics at Warwick University and author of Significant Figures


Born to a poor Lutheran pastor in what is today the Federal Republic of Germany, Bernhard Riemann (1826-1866) was a child math prodigy who began studying for a degree in theology before formally committing to mathematics in 1846, at the age of 20. Though he would live for only another 20 years (he died of pleurisy during a trip to Italy), his seminal work in a number of key areas—several of which now bear his name—had a decisive impact on the shape of mathematics in the succeeding century and a half. 


In Simply Riemann, author Jeremy Gray provides a comprehensive and intellectually stimulating introduction to Riemann’s life and paradigm-defining work. Beginning with his early influences—in particular, his relationship with his renowned predecessor Carl Friedrich Gauss—Gray goes on to explore Riemann’s specific contributions to geometry, functions of a complex variable, prime numbers, and functions of a real variable, which opened the way to discovering the limits of the calculus. He shows how without Riemannian geometry, cosmology after Einstein would be unthinkable, and he illuminates the famous Riemann hypothesis, which many regard as the most important unsolved problem in mathematics today. 


With admirable concision and clarity, Simply Riemann opens the door on one of the most profound and original thinkers of the 19th century—a man who pioneered the concept of a multidimensional reality and who always saw his work as another way to serve God.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2019

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Simply Riemann

Jeremy Gray

Simply Charly

New York

Copyright © 2020 by Jeremy Gray

Cover Illustration by José RamosCover Design by Scarlett Rugers

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher at the address below.

[email protected]

ISBN: 978-1-943657-21-6

Brought to you by http://simplycharly.com

Contents

Praise for Simply RiemannOther Great LivesSeries Editor's ForewordPrefaceIntroduction 1. Riemann's life and times 2. Geometry 3. Complex functions 4. Primes and the zeta function 5. Minimal surfaces 6. Real functions 7. And another thing . . . 8. Riemann's LegacyReferencesSuggested ReadingAbout the AuthorA Word from the Publisher

1

Praise for Simply Riemann

“Jeremy Gray is one of the world’s leading historians of mathematics, and an accomplished author of popular science. In Simply Riemann he combines both talents to give us clear and accessible insights into the astonishing discoveries of Bernhard Riemann—a brilliant but enigmatic mathematician who laid the foundations for several major areas of today’s mathematics, and for Albert Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity. Readable, organized—and simple. Highly recommended.”

—Ian Stewart, Emeritus Professor of Mathematics at Warwick University and author of Significant Figures

“Very few mathematicians have exercised an influence on the later development of their science comparable to Riemann’s whose work reshaped whole fields and created new ones. Gray’s admirable, readable account allows us to appreciate the original and profound ideas of this mathematical genius.”

—Umberto Bottazzini, Professor at the University of Milan and Fellow of the American Mathematical Society

“A terrific introduction to Riemann’s most characteristic ways of thinking. Gray expertly lays out the key problem situations Riemann inherited from Gauss and others, and explains the strategies and concepts that led Riemann to solve problems and create new fields of mathematics. Gray’s broad historical expertise enables him to highlight just which aspects of each problem were clear to Riemann from other people’s work, and pick out just what innovative turn Riemann gave to each.”

—Colin McLarty, Truman P. Handy Professor and Chair of Philosophy at Case Western Reserve University

“If one had to choose a single name of a scientist who simultaneously transformed the course of mathematics, physics, and philosophy, then Bernhard Riemann should come to the forefront. Jeremy Gray’s book on Riemann confirms this idea. Gray is among the rare historians for mathematics who do not only write for historians. His books are interesting for mathematicians and students in mathematics and also for the educated laymen, and this book is no exception.”

—Athanase Papadopoulos, Directeur de Recherche, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and University of Strasbourg

“Unlike some other great mathematicians, Riemann started his math career late at the age of 25 and died at 39. He published a few papers, but his work covered many topics. Whatever he touched, he changed them in a fundamental way. What did he do? How he did it? How could he do it? In this concise scholarly biography of Riemann, one of the leading historians of mathematics of his generation gives satisfying answers to the above questions. Gray combines effectively his deep knowledge of the history of math with his insights into math to produce a fascinating narrative. Besides Riemann, the reader can also learn about stories of other great people such as Gauss and of the scientific community at Riemann’s time.”

—Lizhen Ji, Professor of Mathematics at University of Michigan

“For readers acquainted with calculus, but not necessarily much more, Gray has written an engrossing account of Riemann’s revolutionary contributions to mathematics. Riemann lived and breathed mathematics, and Gray rightly makes mathematics the story of Riemann’s life. He also brings to light the origins of many fields of modern mathematics.”

—John Stillwell, author of The Real Numbers and Professor of Mathematics, University of San Francisco

“In this brief but concentrated account of the life and mathematical works of the great German mathematician Bernhard Riemann, readers will find a lively, detailed analysis of the ethereal realms of mathematics to which Riemann made fundamental contributions. Here Jeremy Gray writes primarily for mathematical readers, who will appreciate the frequent asides, usually prefaced by “More about the mathematics,” that help to explain the significance (or difficulties) with what has just been discussed. In the end, readers will come away from Simply Riemann with a better understanding of some of the most important advances that were made in mathematics in the nineteenth century, when the face of the subject underwent profound changes, many of them due to Bernhard Riemann, tragically dead all too soon at age thirty-nine.”

—Joseph W. Dauben, Distinguished Professor of History and History of Science, City University of New York

“Bernhard Riemann is a towering figure, without doubt, one of the greatest mathematicians. He contributed profound ideas to many areas of mathematics, but above all, he brought a revolution to the most classical one, geometry. Riemann had wide interests, including very especially physics and philosophy, and this enabled him to become one of the architects of modern mathematics. Thus a book on Riemann for the general reader is a great idea—and Jeremy Gray is admirably suited to write such a book.”

—José Ferreirós, Professor of Logic and Philosophy of Science, Universidad de Sevilla

2

Other Great Lives

Simply Austenby Joan Klingel RaySimply Beckettby Katherine WeissSimply Beethoven by Leon PlantingaSimply Chekhov by Carol ApollonioSimply Chomskyby Raphael SalkieSimply Chopinby William SmialekSimply Darwinby Michael RuseSimply Descartesby Kurt SmithSimply Dickensby Paul SchlickeSimply Diracby Helge KraghSimply Einsteinby Jimena CanalesSimply Eliot by Joseph MaddreySimply Euler by Robert E. BradleySimply Faulkner by Philip WeinsteinSimply Fitzgerald by Kim MorelandSimply Freud by Stephen FroshSimply Gödel by Richard TieszenSimply Hegel by Robert L. WicksSimply Hitchcock by David SterrittSimply Joyce by Margot NorrisSimply Machiavelli by Robert FredonaSimply Napoleonby J. David Markham & Matthew ZarzecznySimply Nietzsche by Peter KailSimply Proust by Jack JordanSimply Sartre by David DetmerSimply Tolstoy by Donna Tussing OrwinSimply Stravinsky by Pieter van den ToornSimply Turing by Michael OlinickSimply Wagner by Thomas S. GreySimply Wittgenstein by James C. Klagge

3

Series Editor's Foreword

Simply Charly’s “Great Lives” series offers brief but authoritative introductions to the world’s most influential people—scientists, artists, writers, economists, and other historical figures whose contributions have had a meaningful and enduring impact on our society.

Each book provides an illuminating look at the works, ideas, personal lives, and the legacies these individuals left behind, also shedding light on the thought processes, specific events, and experiences that led these remarkable people to their groundbreaking discoveries or other achievements. Additionally, every volume explores various challenges they had to face and overcome to make history in their respective fields, as well as the little-known character traits, quirks, strengths, and frailties, myths, and controversies that sometimes surrounded these personalities.

Our authors are prominent scholars and other top experts who have dedicated their careers to exploring each facet of their subjects’ work and personal lives.

Unlike many other works that are merely descriptions of the major milestones in a person’s life, the “Great Lives” series goes above and beyond the standard format and content. It brings substance, depth, and clarity to the sometimes-complex lives and works of history’s most powerful and influential people.

We hope that by exploring this series, readers will not only gain new knowledge and understanding of what drove these geniuses, but also find inspiration for their own lives. Isn’t this what a great book is supposed to do?

Charles Carlini, Simply Charly New York City

4

Preface

This book offers an introduction to the work of Bernhard Riemann (September 17, 1826 – July 20, 1866), one of the most profound and influential mathematicians of the 19th century, whose insights continue to reshape mathematics to this day.

It is fitting that Riemann should be included in the Simply Charly Great Lives series, alongside other eminent personalities like Kurt Gödel and Ludwig Wittgenstein, though placing him there has naturally required some compromises. I took the challenge as an opportunity to discuss Riemann’s life, times, and the world in which a quiet university professor could accomplish such radical things in the fields of differential geometry, number theory, and complex analysis, among his other achievements. But I have also tried to say something about mathematics as he saw it and as he helped it become.

Riemann’s genius was to be very clear regarding what a piece of mathematics was about, to strip it of unnecessary presumptions, and to show how the clarity thus obtained was productive. He saw mathematics as a system of concepts, rather than merely as a battery of formulae and techniques. His concepts are often very general, which accounts for their lasting effect, and his insights are often deep: he could see how his ideas inter-related and use them to resolve outstanding problems in the subject. His challenge was to bring out those concepts, which are often very simple and natural, and to show them at work.

What mathematics is involved here? Little more than the skills needed to read a map, a small amount of calculus, a knowledge of what complex numbers are, a liking for geometry, and, in the final chapter, taking pleasure in unexpected detail. And, courtesy of Riemann and any great mathematician, the boldness to see where these ideas can take you.

I would like to thank my Open University colleague June Barrow-Green for years of helpful conversations and good advice; Erhard Scholz for sharing his knowledge of Riemann, geometry, physics, and much else; Lizhen Ji and Athanase Papadopoulos for their comments on a draft that removed many errors; Mario Micallef for many discussions about geometry; and numerous mathematicians and historians of mathematics for conveying their excitement for mathematics and the fascinating riches it contains.

Jeremy Gray London, England

5

Introduction

Figure 1. Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann (1826-1866)

Why should we care about Bernhard Riemann? My answer is: because he is one of the great mathematicians, and was a major influence on the move towards a conceptual, modern mathematics. Paradoxically, the highly conceptual character of his work gives us an excellent opportunity to peer over his shoulder and ponder about what makes some questions in mathematics important, and how we can think mathematically before and after we calculate. In many ways, it is easier, and more exciting, to follow his ideas than those of the virtuoso calculators with symbols and formulae who practiced a form of mathematics he appreciated but was keen to get beyond.

Riemann only lived to 39 years of age, dying in 1866. But despite his brief lifespan, his name became attached to many important topics in 20th- and 21st-century mathematics: geometers and cosmologists speak of Riemannian geometry; many people have heard of the Riemann zeta function and the celebrated Riemann hypothesis, often called the most important unsolved problem in mathematics; mathematical analysts often refer to the idea of a Riemann surface (including the Riemann sphere).

The range of Riemann’s interests was remarkable. Although his best work was in mathematics, he himself said that his principal concern was in physics—the propagation of heat, light, electromagnetism, and gravitation. To bring his ideas into focus, he drew deeply on contemporary philosophy, and undoubtedly these concepts shaped his rewrite of the nature of geometry.

The philosophy of Johann Friedrich Herbart influenced Riemann’s mathematics. Herbart became Immanuel Kant’s successor as professor at the University of Königsberg in 1808 and divided his time there between philosophy and pedagogy until he was appointed professor of philosophy at the University of Göttingen, where he remained until he died in 1841 at the age of 65. While in Königsberg, he wrote his major work, Psychology as Science Newly Founded on Experience, Metaphysics, and Mathematics.

In this book, Herbart argued that experience and metaphysics are equal partners. He explained, in language drawn from contemporary applied mathematics, how the mind deals with experience and forms concepts, how it constructs visual space, how it uses repeated sensations to form memories, and much else. Although a Kantian in some respects, Herbart disagreed with Kant in many ways. In particular, he was willing to identify knowledge of appearances with knowledge of the thing in itself. But for Herbart, what was real was also discrete, and the mind generates the concept of a continuum because it can postulate continuous relations between the discrete points. This intelligible space is the source of our intuitions of Space with its familiar geometric properties, and so for Herbart Space was not an a priori form of intuition as it was for Kant. Instead, it was a derived and constructed intuition.

At times, Riemann was critical of Herbart’s work, but he valued it highly. He wrote (Werke, p. 539) that he could agree with almost all of Herbart’s earliest research, but not with his later speculations at certain essential points to do with his Naturphilosophie (Natural Philosophy) and psychology. Elsewhere in the Nachlass (a collection of manuscripts and other notes left when the author dies), he wrote (quoted in Scholz 1982, 414) that he was Herbartian in epistemology but not in ontology.

Riemann regarded natural science as an attempt to comprehend nature by precise concepts. Herbart had shown that all concepts that help us understand the world arise by refining earlier concepts. They need not be derived a priori, as with the Kantian categories. But Riemann said (Werke, 554) it is because concepts originate in comprehending what sense-perception provides that “their significance can be established in a manner adequate for natural science” (emphasis in original).

For Riemann, a conception of the world is correct, “when the coherence of our ideas corresponds to the coherence of things,” and this coherence of things will be obtained “from the coherence of phenomena” (Riemann Werke, 555). So an internally self-consistent set of ideas is to be matched somehow to the coherent phenomena. But Riemann largely skipped Herbart’s description of how the coherent system of ideas about space is generated from experience and went straight to the generation of geometric concepts in mathematics. He even allowed that Space could be discrete, inspired perhaps by Herbart’s opinion that it is only intelligible Space that is continuous. However, he dropped Herbart’s view that Space was necessarily three-dimensional, and was insistent on thinking geometrically about any number of variables.

Mathematics, in Herbart’s view, was more like philosophy than science, and Riemann’s position on science and mathematics was heavily conceptual. One thorough study of Herbart’s influence concluded that Riemann’s views on mathematics “seem to have been deepened and clarified by his extensive studies of Herbart’s philosophy. Moreover, without this orientation, Riemann might never have formulated his profound and innovative concept of a manifold” (Scholz 1982, 426).

The major issues in the theoretical physics of Riemann’s time had to do with gravitation and electromagnetism. These were taken, controversially, to involve action at a distance, perhaps mediated by an all-pervading ether that, whatever it might be, gave substance to Space. These questions interested the young Riemann deeply. While finishing his post-doctoral work in Göttingen in the early 1850s, he also worked in the laboratory of physicist Wilhelm Weber, a friend and colleague of the eminent mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss. Riemann worked there on “the connection between electricity, light, and magnetism” (Riemann Werke, 580). He drafted a paper drawing on his reading of the work of Isaac Newton, Leonhard Euler, and, more surprisingly, Herbart, in which Herbart’s plenum was transformed into a universe filled with a substance flowing through atoms and out of the material world. Stresses and strains in this substance (a species of ether) show up as deformations of the local metric. This variation in the metric would, in turn, be felt by a particle as a force, and by resisting this force, the particle might move through Space. However, he found that he could not make these ideas work, and the paper was abandoned.

He returned to the theme of gravitation and light some years later, this time coming up with a theory in which motion through Space was explained purely in terms of relations defined infinitesimally. Nothing was published, but Riemann did discuss the properties of the ether in his lectures of 1861, published by the Göttingen mathematician Karl Hattendorff, in 1876. In this version, variations in the density of the ether would be responsible for electro-static and electro-dynamic effects.

The principal influence of these speculations was not in physics, but in the theory of geometry that Riemann set out in his post-doctoral (Habilitation) lecture. There, the idea of local distortions of space leads naturally to the idea of a variable metric on a mathematically defined space. In a way, his work dramatically raised the possibility that there might be many forms of mathematics, all potentially valid, or at least useful in physics.

The structure of this book

We start with a chapter on the major influences on the mathematical world into which Riemann was born. It would over-simplify, but not by much, to sum that up in a word: Gauss. As the standard biographies of Gauss—(Dunnington 1955/2004) and (Bühler 1981)—make clear, he was a German mathematician whose brilliance earned him the title of the last Prince of Mathematicians. His work between 1799, when he turned 22, and 1855, when he died, set the agenda for all who followed him, Riemann included. Riemann’s work in geometry and mathematical analysis would have been impossible without Gauss’s insights. But there were other influences in the generation between Gauss and Riemann, among them that of Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet, who not only had a fine eye for rigor in mathematics, but was also a personal help to Riemann, and Dirichlet’s friend Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi. Behind them all stood the figure of Leonhard Euler, the dominant mathematician of the 18th century, many of whose works Riemann came to know very well.

Then we turn to Riemann’s work on geometry: the creation of infinitely many geometries that might be physically plausible, mathematically useful, or just downright interesting.

Then we look at the subject on which he wrote the most: the theory of functions of a complex variable. This is now a standard branch of mathematical analysis. At the time, it was an entirely new field, one that Riemann’s ideas helped to shape, ideas that were challenged root and branch by his rivals in Berlin—Karl Weierstrass and Hermann Amandus Schwarz. From this work, Riemann proposed the celebrated “Riemann hypothesis,” as we shall see in the next chapter, and, in the chapter after that, to break open the unsolved Plateau problem about surfaces of minimal area.

The following chapter shows how markedly Dirichlet influenced Riemann. In it, we look at Riemann’s paper on what are called trigonometric series. It is, as Riemann observed, partly an inquiry into the limits of the calculus: can there be functions to which the calculus does not apply, and if so, what can we say about them? After that, we will look briefly at some of Riemann’s achievements that cannot be described here, and the book concludes with a discussion of his legacy and some of the work that it has inspired.

Pre-requisites

I have made every effort to keep the text to as elementary a level as possible, but I assume readers know a little coordinate geometry, that they know what complex numbers are (and are comfortable thinking of them as points in the plane), that they are willing to assume that there are functions of a complex variable, although they may know nothing about them, and that they have met the elementary calculus. Topics that go beyond this are discussed in four boxes and at the end of Chapter 4. The currency for enjoying this book is that the more you know in these final sections, the less you have to take on trust.

1

Riemann's life and times

Georg Bernhard Friedrich Riemann was born on September 17, 1826, the second of six children. As the author Detlef Laugwitz describes in the standard biography of the mathematician (Laugwitz 1999), Riemann’s father was a pastor in Breselenz near Dannenberg in Hanover, which was then a poor part of Germany on the Elbe river. Young Riemann grew up as an introverted child who found it difficult to get close to people. Until he turned 14, he was taught at home and in the village school in Quickborn, where his family had moved, and he was unhappy when he was sent away to school in Hanover and Lüneburg. He never found it easy to express himself, but C. Schmalfuss, the Director of the school in Lüneburg, soon realized that the boy had a talent for mathematics and gave him books to foster this innate gift. When he received Adrien-Marie Legendre’s Théorie des Nombres (Number Theory), an old-fashioned but demanding book by a Frenchman who had been a leading mathematician in his time, Riemann returned it within a week, saying “This is a wonderful book; I know it by heart.”

In September 1846, Riemann went to the University in Göttingen. There, he quickly transferred from theology, which his father had wanted him to study, to mathematics, a subject that matched his evident ability. Gauss still worked there, but he only taught elementary statistics, so Riemann availed himself of the right of every German student to study anywhere in Germany and went to the University of Berlin during Easter of 1847. The university had been founded by Alexander von Humboldt in 1809 as part of a move to help Prussia recover from the shock of being overrun by Napoleon’s armies, and it was being built up as the leading university in the state. Humboldt brought Dirichlet there when he heard of his great merits as a mathematician, and it was Dirichlet who first taught Riemann advanced mathematics.

Dirichlet lectured on number theory, definite integrals, and partial differential equations. His friend Jacobi also taught there, lecturing on analytical mechanics and higher algebra. These two men had almost single-handedly modernized the study of mathematics in Germany; Dirichlet, in particular, was fully aware of the changes being wrought in Paris, then the center of the mathematical world.

Riemann learned a lot in the two years he spent in Berlin, but he returned to Göttingen after the political upheavals that occurred in Europe in 1848. He took his degree there, combining his studies with readings in philosophy and physics. He particularly enjoyed a course in experimental physics given by Gauss’s colleague Wilhelm Weber and joined the seminar on mathematical physics. He then immediately embarked on his doctorate, which he took in 1851. After that, the only formal qualification left to get was the so-called Habilitation, which was a necessary and sufficient condition to teach at any German university (it did not imply that you would also be paid).

Once back in Göttingen, Riemann’s life proceeded quietly, in ways that the following chapters document. In the autumn of 1852, Dirichlet visited Göttingen and, to Riemann’s delight, spent two hours talking to him, discussing his doctoral thesis, and giving him advice about the Habilitation that he was preparing for. Riemann wrote to his father that Dirichlet had been “extremely friendly” towards him, and they met again at Weber’s house later in the week. One wonders if Dirichlet was visiting Göttingen with his own prospects in mind; in any event, when Gauss died in 1855, Dirichlet succeeded him, which must have pleased Riemann greatly. By then, Riemann had passed his Habilitation exam triumphantly and was already lecturing on an informal basis at the university. With Dirichlet’s arrival, Riemann got a small salary but attempts to get him appointed as a junior professor failed.

Riemann now devoted himself to his research and published two major papers in 1857, one on a particular ordinary differential equation that Gauss had studied, and the other on what is called the theory of Abelian functions (as we discuss below). The effort of working out his new approach to these subjects, resolving problems that had defeated his illustrious predecessors and then explaining what he had done in enough detail to be understood completely exhausted him, and he became depressed. His spirits were restored during a walking holiday in the Harz mountains with his friend, the young mathematician Richard Dedekind; on his return, he was finally appointed a junior professor.