3/7/2026 at 4:53:46 PM
The article mentions Mach numbers, but it leaves out what is most interesting about Mach’s place in the history of science, which is as a bridge to Einstein and General Relativity. Essentially Einstein read Mach and took a bunch of mind-bendingly profound but vague philosophical ideas like Mach’s Principle[0] and put together General Relativity out of it. And this self portrait gives that side of Mach too - the philosopher obsessed with phenomenology and how local perception relates to the large scale universe out there.by libraryofbabel
3/7/2026 at 8:06:45 PM
As a side note, Einstein read Mach but strongly opposed logical positivism[0].[0]: https://philosophynow.org/issues/133/Einstein_vs_Logical_Pos...
by fidrelity
3/8/2026 at 7:34:54 AM
That is not what your source says. It gives one quote by him that may be misinterpreted in this context, but later clears up that Einstein was not really opposed. He merely thought that pure math was a valid way to discover new scientific insight. But even that point of view, while radical at the time, is pretty much in line with logical positivism and has turned out to be true many times since then.by sigmoid10