Mathematical Problems
Lecture delivered before the International Congress of Mathematicians
at Paris in 1900
By Professor David Hilbert1
Who of us would not be glad to lift the veil behind
which the future lies hidden; to cast a glance at the next advances
of our science and at the secrets of its development during future
centuries? What particular goals will there be toward which the
leading mathematical spirits of coming generations will strive?
What new methods and new facts in the wide and rich field of mathematical
thought will the new centuries disclose?
History teaches the continuity
of the development of science. We know that every age has its own
problems, which the following age either solves or casts aside as
profitless and replaces by new ones. If we would obtain an idea
of the probable development of mathematical knowledge in the immediate
future, we must let the unsettled questions pass before our minds
and look over the problems which the science of today sets and whose
solution we expect from the future. To such a review of problems
the present day, lying at the meeting of the centuries, seems to
me well adapted. For the close of a great epoch not only invites
us to look back into the past but also directs our thoughts to the
unknown future.
The deep significance
of certain problems for the advance of mathematical science in general
and the important role which they play in the work of the individual
investigator are not to be denied. As long as a branch of science
offers an abundance of problems, so long is it alive; a lack of
problems foreshadows extinction or the cessation of independent
development. Just as every human undertaking pursues certain objects,
so also mathematical research requires its problems. It is by the
solution of problems that the investigator tests the temper of his
steel; he finds new methods and new outlooks, and gains a wider
and freer horizon.
It is difficult and often
impossible to judge the value of a problem correctly in advance;
for the final award depends upon the gain which science obtains
from the problem. Nevertheless we can ask whether there are general
criteria which mark a good mathematical problem. An old French mathematician
said: "A mathematical theory is not to be considered complete
until you have made it so clear that you can explain it to the first
man whom you meet on the street." This clearness and ease of
comprehension, here insisted on for a mathematical theory, I should
still more demand for a mathematical problem if it is to be perfect;
for what is clear and easily comprehended attracts, the complicated
repels us.
Moreover a mathematical
problem should be difficult in order to entice us, yet not completely
inaccessible, lest it mock at our efforts. It should be to us a
guide post on the mazy paths to hidden truths, and ultimately a
reminder of our pleasure in the successful solution.
The mathematicians of
past centuries were accustomed to devote themselves to the solution
of difficult particular problems with passionate zeal. They knew
the value of difficult problems. I remind you only of the "problem
of the line of quickest descent," proposed by John Bernoulli.
Experience teaches, explains Bernoulli in the public announcement
of this problem, that lofty minds are led to strive for the advance
of science by nothing more than by laying before them difficult
and at the same time useful problems, and he therefore hopes to
earn the thanks of the mathematical world by following the example
of men like Mersenne, Pascal, Fermat, Viviani and others and laying
before the distinguished analysts of his time a problem by which,
as a touchstone, they may test the value of their methods and measure
their strength. The calculus of variations owes its origin to this
problem of Bernoulli and to similar problems.
Fermat had asserted,
as is well known, that the diophantine equation
xn + yn = zn
(x, y and z integers) is unsolvable--except
in certain self evident cases. The attempt to prove this impossibility
offers a striking example of the inspiring effect which such a very
special and apparently unimportant problem may have upon science.
For Kummer, incited by Fermat's problem, was led to the introduction
of ideal numbers and to the discovery of the law of the unique decomposition
of the numbers of a circular field into ideal prime factors--a law
which today, in its generalization to any algebraic field by Dedekind
and Kronecker, stands at the center of the modern theory of numbers
and whose significance extends far beyond the boundaries of number
theory into the realm of algebra and the theory of functions.
To speak of a very different
region of research, I remind you of the problem of three bodies.
The fruitful methods and the far-reaching principles which Poincar
has brought into celestial mechanics and which are today recognized
and applied in practical astronomy are due to the circumstance that
he undertook to treat anew that difficult problem and to approach
nearer a solution.
The two last mentioned
problems--that of Fermat and the problem of the three bodies--seem
to us almost like opposite poles--the former a free invention of
pure reason, belonging to the region of abstract number theory,
the latter forced upon us by astronomy and necessary to an understanding
of the simplest fundamental phenomena of nature.
But it often happens
also that the same special problem finds application in the most
unlike branches of mathematical knowledge. So, for example, the
problem of the shortest line plays a chief and historically important
part in the foundations of geometry, in the theory of curved lines
and surfaces, in mechanics and in the calculus of variations. And
how convincingly has F. Klein, in his work on the icosahedron, pictured
the significance which attaches to the problem of the regular polyhedra
in elementary geometry, in group theory, in the theory of equations
and in that of linear differential equations.
In order to throw light
on the importance of certain problems, I may also refer to Weierstrass,
who spoke of it as his happy fortune that he found at the outset
of his scientific career a problem so important as Jacobi's problem
of inversion on which to work.
Having now recalled to
mind the general importance of problems in mathematics, let us turn
to the question from what sources this science derives its problems.
Surely the first and oldest problems in every branch of mathematics
spring from experience and are suggested by the world of external
phenomena. Even the rules of calculation with integers must have
been discovered in this fashion in a lower stage of human civilization,
just as the child of today learns the application of these laws
by empirical methods. The same is true of the first problems of
geometry, the problems bequeathed us by antiquity, such as the duplication
of the cube, the squaring of the circle; also the oldest problems
in the theory of the solution of numerical equations, in the theory
of curves and the differential and integral calculus, in the calculus
of variations, the theory of Fourier series and the theory of potential--to
say nothing of the further abundance of problems properly belonging
to mechanics, astronomy and physics.
But, in the further development
of a branch of mathematics, the human mind, encouraged by the success
of its solutions, becomes conscious of its independence. It evolves
from itself alone, often without appreciable influence from without,
by means of logical combination, generalization, specialization,
by separating and collecting ideas in fortunate ways, new and fruitful
problems, and appears then itself as the real questioner. Thus arose
the problem of prime numbers and the other problems of number theory,
Galois's theory of equations, the theory of algebraic invariants,
the theory of abelian and automorphic functions; indeed almost all
the nicer questions of modern arithmetic and function theory arise
in this way.
In the meantime, while
the creative power of pure reason is at work, the outer world again
comes into play, forces upon us new questions from actual experience,
opens up new branches of mathematics, and while we seek to conquer
these new fields of knowledge for the realm of pure thought, we
often find the answers to old unsolved problems and thus at the
same time advance most successfully the old theories. And it seems
to me that the numerous and surprising analogies and that apparently
prearranged harmony which the mathematician so often perceives in
the questions, methods and ideas of the various branches of his
science, have their origin in this ever-recurring interplay between
thought and experience.
It remains to discuss
briefly what general requirements may be justly laid down for the
solution of a mathematical problem. I should say first of all, this:
that it shall be possible to establish the correctness of the solution
by means of a finite number of steps based upon a finite number
of hypotheses which are implied in the statement of the problem
and which must always be exactly formulated. This requirement of
logical deduction by means of a finite number of processes is simply
the requirement of rigor in reasoning. Indeed the requirement of
rigor, which has become proverbial in mathematics, corresponds to
a universal philosophical necessity of our understanding; and, on
the other hand, only by satisfying this requirement do the thought
content and the suggestiveness of the problem attain their full
effect. A new problem, especially when it comes from the world of
outer experience, is like a young twig, which thrives and bears
fruit only when it is grafted carefully and in accordance with strict
horticultural rules upon the old stem, the established achievements
of our mathematical science.
Besides it is an error
to believe that rigor in the proof is the enemy of simplicity. On
the contrary we find it confirmed by numerous examples that the
rigorous method is at the same time the simpler and the more easily
comprehended. The very effort for rigor forces us to find out simpler
methods of proof. It also frequently leads the way to methods which
are more capable of development than the old methods of less rigor.
Thus the theory of algebraic curves experienced a considerable simplification
and attained greater unity by means of the more rigorous function-theoretical
methods and the consistent introduction of transcendental devices.
Further, the proof that the power series permits the application
of the four elementary arithmetical operations as well as the term
by term differentiation and integration, and the recognition of
the utility of the power series depending upon this proof contributed
materially to the simplification of all analysis, particularly of
the theory of elimination and the theory of differential equations,
and also of the existence proofs demanded in those theories. But
the most striking example for my statement is the calculus of variations.
The treatment of the first and second variations of definite integrals
required in part extremely complicated calculations, and the processes
applied by the old mathematicians had not the needful rigor. Weierstrass
showed us the way to a new and sure foundation of the calculus of
variations. By the examples of the simple and double integral I
will show briefly, at the close of my lecture, how this way leads
at once to a surprising simplification of the calculus of variations.
For in the demonstration of the necessary and sufficient criteria
for the occurrence of a maximum and minimum, the calculation of
the second variation and in part, indeed, the wearisome reasoning
connected with the first variation may be completely dispensed with--to
say nothing of the advance which is involved in the removal of the
restriction to variations for which the differential coefficients
of the function vary but slightly.
While insisting on rigor
in the proof as a requirement for a perfect solution of a problem,
I should like, on the other hand, to oppose the opinion that only
the concepts of analysis, or even those of arithmetic alone, are
susceptible of a fully rigorous treatment. This opinion, occasionally
advocated by eminent men, I consider entirely erroneous. Such a
one-sided interpretation of the requirement of rigor would soon
lead to the ignoring of all concepts arising from geometry, mechanics
and physics, to a stoppage of the flow of new material from the
outside world, and finally, indeed, as a last consequence, to the
rejection of the ideas of the continuum and of the irrational number.
But what an important nerve, vital to mathematical science, would
be cut by the extirpation of geometry and mathematical physics!
On the contrary I think that wherever, from the side of the theory
of knowledge or in geometry, or from the theories of natural or
physical science, mathematical ideas come up, the problem arises
for mathematical science to investigate the principles underlying
these ideas and so to establish them upon a simple and complete
system of axioms, that the exactness of the new ideas and their
applicability to deduction shall be in no respect inferior to those
of the old arithmetical concepts.
To new concepts correspond,
necessarily, new signs. These we choose in such a way that they
remind us of the phenomena which were the occasion for the formation
of the new concepts. So the geometrical figures are signs or mnemonic
symbols of space intuition and are used as such by all mathematicians.
Who does not always use along with the double inequality a
> b > c the picture of three points following
one another on a straight line as the geometrical picture of the
idea "between"? Who does not make use of drawings of segments
and rectangles enclosed in one another, when it is required to prove
with perfect rigor a difficult theorem on the continuity of functions
or the existence of points of condensation? Who could dispense with
the figure of the triangle, the circle with its center, or with
the cross of three perpendicular axes? Or who would give up the
representation of the vector field, or the picture of a family of
curves or surfaces with its envelope which plays so important a
part in differential geometry, in the theory of differential equations,
in the foundation of the calculus of variations and in other purely
mathematical sciences?
The arithmetical symbols
are written diagrams and the geometrical figures are graphic formulas;
and no mathematician could spare these graphic formulas, any more
than in calculation the insertion and removal of parentheses or
the use of other analytical signs.
The use of geometrical
signs as a means of strict proof presupposes the exact knowledge
and complete mastery of the axioms which underlie those figures;
and in order that these geometrical figures may be incorporated
in the general treasure of mathematical signs, there is necessary
a rigorous axiomatic investigation of their conceptual content.
Just as in adding two numbers, one must place the digits under each
other in the right order, so that only the rules of calculation,
i. e., the axioms of arithmetic, determine the correct use
of the digits, so the use of geometrical signs is determined by
the axioms of geometrical concepts and their combinations.
The agreement between
geometrical and arithmetical thought is shown also in that we do
not habitually follow the chain of reasoning back to the axioms
in arithmetical, any more than in geometrical discussions. On the
contrary we apply, especially in first attacking a problem, a rapid,
unconscious, not absolutely sure combination, trusting to a certain
arithmetical feeling for the behavior of the arithmetical symbols,
which we could dispense with as little in arithmetic as with the
geometrical imagination in geometry. As an example of an arithmetical
theory operating rigorously with geometrical ideas and signs, I
may mention Minkowski's work, Die Geometrie der Zahlen.2
Some remarks upon the
difficulties which mathematical problems may offer, and the means
of surmounting them, may be in place here.
If we do not succeed
in solving a mathematical problem, the reason frequently consists
in our failure to recognize the more general standpoint from which
the problem before us appears only as a single link in a chain of
related problems. After finding this standpoint, not only is this
problem frequently more accessible to our investigation, but at
the same time we come into possession of a method which is applicable
also to related problems. The introduction of complex paths of integration
by Cauchy and of the notion of the IDEALS in number theory by Kummer
may serve as examples. This way for finding general methods is certainly
the most practicable and the most certain; for he who seeks for
methods without having a definite problem in mind seeks for the
most part in vain.
In dealing with mathematical
problems, specialization plays, as I believe, a still more important
part than generalization. Perhaps in most cases where we seek in
vain the answer to a question, the cause of the failure lies in
the fact that problems simpler and easier than the one in hand have
been either not at all or incompletely solved. All depends, then,
on finding out these easier problems, and on solving them by means
of devices as perfect as possible and of concepts capable of generalization.
This rule is one of the most important levers for overcoming mathematical
difficulties and it seems to me that it is used almost always, though
perhaps unconsciously.
Occasionally it happens
that we seek the solution under insufficient hypotheses or in an
incorrect sense, and for this reason do not succeed. The problem
then arises: to show the impossibility of the solution under the
given hypotheses, or in the sense contemplated. Such proofs of impossibility
were effected by the ancients, for instance when they showed that
the ratio of the hypotenuse to the side of an isosceles right triangle
is irrational. In later mathematics, the question as to the impossibility
of certain solutions plays a preeminent part, and we perceive in
this way that old and difficult problems, such as the proof of the
axiom of parallels, the squaring of the circle, or the solution
of equations of the fifth degree by radicals have finally found
fully satisfactory and rigorous solutions, although in another sense
than that originally intended. It is probably this important fact
along with other philosophical reasons that gives rise to the conviction
(which every mathematician shares, but which no one has as yet supported
by a proof) that every definite mathematical problem must necessarily
be susceptible of an exact settlement, either in the form of an
actual answer to the question asked, or by the proof of the impossibility
of its solution and therewith the necessary failure of all attempts.
Take any definite unsolved problem, such as the question as to the
irrationality of the Euler-Mascheroni constant C, or the
existence of an infinite number of prime numbers of the form 2n
+ 1. However unapproachable these problems may seem to us and however
helpless we stand before them, we have, nevertheless, the firm conviction
that their solution must follow by a finite number of purely logical
processes.
Is this axiom of the
solvability of every problem a peculiarity characteristic of mathematical
thought alone, or is it possibly a general law inherent in the nature
of the mind, that all questions which it asks must be answerable?
For in other sciences also one meets old problems which have been
settled in a manner most satisfactory and most useful to science
by the proof of their impossibility. I instance the problem of perpetual
motion. After seeking in vain for the construction of a perpetual
motion machine, the relations were investigated which must subsist
between the forces of nature if such a machine is to be impossible;3
and this inverted question led to the discovery of the law of the
conservation of energy, which, again, explained the impossibility
of perpetual motion in the sense originally intended.
This conviction of the
solvability of every mathematical problem is a powerful incentive
to the worker. We hear within us the perpetual call: There is the
problem. Seek its solution. You can find it by pure reason, for
in mathematics there is no ignorabimus.
The supply of problems
in mathematics is inexhaustible, and as soon as one problem is solved
numerous others come forth in its place. Permit me in the following,
tentatively as it were, to mention particular definite problems,
drawn from various branches of mathematics, from the discussion
of which an advancement of science may be expected.
Let us look at the principles
of analysis and geometry. The most suggestive and notable achievements
of the last century in this field are, as it seems to me, the arithmetical
formulation of the concept of the continuum in the works of Cauchy,
Bolzano and Cantor, and the discovery of non-euclidean geometry
by Gauss, Bolyai, and Lobachevsky. I therefore first direct your
attention to some problems belonging to these fields.
1. Cantor's problem of the cardinal number of the continuum
Two systems, i. e, two assemblages of ordinary
real numbers or points, are said to be (according to Cantor) equivalent
or of equal cardinal number, if they can be brought into
a relation to one another such that to every number of the one assemblage
corresponds one and only one definite number of the other. The investigations
of Cantor on such assemblages of points suggest a very plausible
theorem, which nevertheless, in spite of the most strenuous efforts,
no one has succeeded in proving. This is the theorem:
Every system of infinitely
many real numbers, i. e., every assemblage of numbers (or
points), is either equivalent to the assemblage of natural integers,
1, 2, 3,... or to the assemblage of all real numbers and therefore
to the continuum, that is, to the points of a line; as regards
equivalence there are, therefore, only two assemblages of numbers,
the countable assemblage and the continuum.
From this theorem it
would follow at once that the continuum has the next cardinal number
beyond that of the countable assemblage; the proof of this theorem
would, therefore, form a new bridge between the countable assemblage
and the continuum.
Let me mention another
very remarkable statement of Cantor's which stands in the closest
connection with the theorem mentioned and which, perhaps, offers
the key to its proof. Any system of real numbers is said to be ordered,
if for every two numbers of the system it is determined which one
is the earlier and which the later, and if at the same time this
determination is of such a kind that, if a is before b
and b is before c, then a always comes before
c. The natural arrangement of numbers of a system is defined
to be that in which the smaller precedes the larger. But there are,
as is easily seen infinitely many other ways in which the numbers
of a system may be arranged.
If we think of a definite
arrangement of numbers and select from them a particular system
of these numbers, a so-called partial system or assemblage, this
partial system will also prove to be ordered. Now Cantor considers
a particular kind of ordered assemblage which he designates as a
well ordered assemblage and which is characterized in this way,
that not only in the assemblage itself but also in every partial
assemblage there exists a first number. The system of integers 1,
2, 3, ... in their natural order is evidently a well ordered assemblage.
On the other hand the system of all real numbers, i. e.,
the continuum in its natural order, is evidently not well ordered.
For, if we think of the points of a segment of a straight line,
with its initial point excluded, as our partial assemblage, it will
have no first element.
The question now arises
whether the totality of all numbers may not be arranged in another
manner so that every partial assemblage may have a first element,
i. e., whether the continuum cannot be considered as a well
ordered assemblage--a question which Cantor thinks must be answered
in the affirmative. It appears to me most desirable to obtain a
direct proof of this remarkable statement of Cantor's, perhaps by
actually giving an arrangement of numbers such that in every partial
system a first number can be pointed out.
2. The compatibility of the arithmetical axioms
When we are engaged in investigating the foundations
of a science, we must set up a system of axioms which contains an
exact and complete description of the relations subsisting between
the elementary ideas of that science. The axioms so set up are at
the same time the definitions of those elementary ideas; and no
statement within the realm of the science whose foundation we are
testing is held to be correct unless it can be derived from those
axioms by means of a finite number of logical steps. Upon closer
consideration the question arises: Whether, in any way, certain
statements of single axioms depend upon one another, and whether
the axioms may not therefore contain certain parts in common, which
must be isolated if one wishes to arrive at a system of axioms that
shall be altogether independent of one another.
But above all I wish
to designate the following as the most important among the numerous
questions which can be asked with regard to the axioms: To prove
that they are not contradictory, that is, that a definite number
of logical steps based upon them can never lead to contradictory
results.
In geometry, the proof
of the compatibility of the axioms can be effected by constructing
a suitable field of numbers, such that analogous relations between
the numbers of this field correspond to the geometrical axioms.
Any contradiction in the deductions from the geometrical axioms
must thereupon be recognizable in the arithmetic of this field of
numbers. In this way the desired proof for the compatibility of
the geometrical axioms is made to depend upon the theorem of the
compatibility of the arithmetical axioms.
On the other hand a direct
method is needed for the proof of the compatibility of the arithmetical
axioms. The axioms of arithmetic are essentially nothing else than
the known rules of calculation, with the addition of the axiom of
continuity. I recently collected them4
and in so doing replaced the axiom of continuity by two simpler
axioms, namely, the well-known axiom of Archimedes, and a new axiom
essentially as follows: that numbers form a system of things which
is capable of no further extension, as long as all the other axioms
hold (axiom of completeness). I am convinced that it must be possible
to find a direct proof for the compatibility of the arithmetical
axioms, by means of a careful study and suitable modification of
the known methods of reasoning in the theory of irrational numbers.
To show the significance
of the problem from another point of view, I add the following observation:
If contradictory attributes be assigned to a concept, I say, that
mathematically the concept does not exist. So, for example,
a real number whose square is -l does not exist mathematically.
But if it can be proved that the attributes assigned to the concept
can never lead to a contradiction by the application of a finite
number of logical processes, I say that the mathematical existence
of the concept (for example, of a number or a function which satisfies
certain conditions) is thereby proved. In the case before us, where
we are concerned with the axioms of real numbers in arithmetic,
the proof of the compatibility of the axioms is at the same time
the proof of the mathematical existence of the complete system of
real numbers or of the continuum. Indeed, when the proof for the
compatibility of the axioms shall be fully accomplished, the doubts
which have been expressed occasionally as to the existence of the
complete system of real numbers will become totally groundless.
The totality of real numbers, i. e., the continuum according
to the point of view just indicated, is not the totality of all
possible series in decimal fractions, or of all possible laws according
to which the elements of a fundamental sequence may proceed. It
is rather a system of things whose mutual relations are governed
by the axioms set up and for which all propositions, and only those,
are true which can be derived from the axioms by a finite number
of logical processes. In my opinion, the concept of the continuum
is strictly logically tenable in this sense only. It seems to me,
indeed, that this corresponds best also to what experience and intuition
tell us. The concept of the continuum or even that of the system
of all functions exists, then, in exactly the same sense as the
system of integral, rational numbers, for example, or as Cantor's
higher classes of numbers and cardinal numbers. For I am convinced
that the existence of the latter, just as that of the continuum,
can be proved in the sense I have described; unlike the system of
all cardinal numbers or of all Cantor s alephs, for
which, as may be shown, a system of axioms, compatible in my sense,
cannot be set up. Either of these systems is, therefore, according
to my terminology, mathematically non-existent.
From the field of the
foundations of geometry I should like to mention the following problem:
3. The equality of two volumes of two tetrahedra of equal bases
and equal altitudes
In two letters to Gerling, Gauss5
expresses his regret that certain theorems of solid geometry depend
upon the method of exhaustion, i. e., in modern phraseology,
upon the axiom of continuity (or upon the axiom of Archimedes).
Gauss mentions in particular the theorem of Euclid, that triangular
pyramids of equal altitudes are to each other as their bases. Now
the analogous problem in the plane has been solved.6
Gerling also succeeded in proving the equality of volume of symmetrical
polyhedra by dividing them into congruent parts. Nevertheless, it
seems to me probable that a general proof of this kind for the theorem
of Euclid just mentioned is impossible, and it should be our task
to give a rigorous proof of its impossibility. This would be obtained,
as soon as we succeeded in specifying two tetrahedra of equal
bases and equal altitudes which can in no way be split up into congruent
tetrahedra, and which cannot be combined with congruent tetrahedra
to form two polyhedra which themselves could be split up into congruent
tetrahedra.7
4. Problem of the straight line as the shortest distance between
two points
Another problem relating to the foundations
of geometry is this: If from among the axioms necessary to establish
ordinary euclidean geometry, we exclude the axiom of parallels,
or assume it as not satisfied, but retain all other axioms, we obtain,
as is well known, the geometry of Lobachevsky (hyperbolic geometry).
We may therefore say that this is a geometry standing next to euclidean
geometry. If we require further that that axiom be not satisfied
whereby, of three points of a straight line, one and only one lies
between the other two, we obtain Riemann's (elliptic) geometry,
so that this geometry appears to be the next after Lobachevsky's.
If we wish to carry out a similar investigation with respect to
the axiom of Archimedes, we must look upon this as not satisfied,
and we arrive thereby at the non-archimedean geometries which have
been investigated by Veronese and myself. The more general question
now arises: Whether from other suggestive standpoints geometries
may not be devised which, with equal right, stand next to euclidean
geometry. Here I should like to direct your attention to a theorem
which has, indeed, been employed by many authors as a definition
of a straight line, viz., that the straight line is the shortest
distance between two points. The essential content of this statement
reduces to the theorem of Euclid that in a triangle the sum of two
sides is always greater than the third side--a theorem which, as
is easily seen, deals sole]y with elementary concepts, i. e.,
with such as are derived directly from the axioms, and is therefore
more accessible to logical investigation. Euclid proved this theorem,
with the help of the theorem of the exterior angle, on the basis
of the congruence theorems. Now it is readily shown that this theorem
of Euclid cannot be proved solely on the basis of those congruence
theorems which relate to the application of segments and angles,
but that one of the theorems on the congruence of triangles is necessary.
We are asking, then, for a geometry in which all the axioms of ordinary
euclidean geometry hold, and in particular all the congruence axioms
except the one of the congruence of triangles (or all except the
theorem of the equality of the base angles in the isosceles triangle),
and in which, besides, the proposition that in every triangle the
sum of two sides is greater than the third is assumed as a particular
axiom.
One finds that such a
geometry really exists and is no other than that which Minkowski
constructed in his book, Geometrie der Zahlen,8
and made the basis of his arithmetical investigations. Minkowski's
is therefore also a geometry standing next to the ordinary euclidean
geometry; it is essentially characterized by the following stipulations:
1. The points which are at equal distances from a fixed point O
lie on a convex closed surface of the ordinary euclidean space with
O as a center.
2. Two segments are said to be equal when one can be carried into
the other by a translation of the ordinary euclidean space.
In Minkowski's geometry
the axiom of parallels also holds. By studying the theorem of the
straight line as the shortest distance between two points, I arrived9
at a geometry in which the parallel axiom does not hold, while all
other axioms of Minkowski's geometry are satisfied. The theorem
of the straight line as the shortest distance between two points
and the essentially equivalent theorem of Euclid about the sides
of a triangle, play an important part not only in number theory
but also in the theory of surfaces and in the calculus of variations.
For this reason, and because I believe that the thorough investigation
of the conditions for the validity of this theorem will throw a
new light upon the idea of distance, as well as upon other elementary
ideas, e. g., upon the idea of the plane, and the possibility
of its definition by means of the idea of the straight line, the
construction and systematic treatment of the geometries here possible
seem to me desirable.
5. Lie's concept of a continuous group of transformations without
the assumption of the differentiability of the functions defining
the group
It is well known that Lie, with the aid of
the concept of continuous groups of transformations, has set up
a system of geometrical axioms and, from the standpoint of his theory
of groups, has proved that this system of axioms suffices for geometry.
But since Lie assumes, in the very foundation of his theory, that
the functions defining his group can be differentiated, it remains
undecided in Lie's development, whether the assumption of the differentiability
in connection with the question as to the axioms of geometry is
actually unavoidable, or whether it may not appear rather as a consequence
of the group concept and the other geometrical axioms. This consideration,
as well as certain other problems in connection with the arithmetical
axioms, brings before us the more general question: How far Lie's
concept of continuous groups of transformations is approachable
in our investigations without the assumption of the differentiability
of the functions.
Lie defines a finite
continuous group of transformations as a system of transformations
xi' = fi(x1,
... , xn; a1, ... , ar)
(i = 1, ..., n)
having the property that any two arbitrarily chosen
transformations of the system, as
xi' = fi(x1,
... , xn; a1, ... , ar)
xi" = fi(x1',
... , xn'; b1, ... , br)
applied successively result in a transformation
which also belongs to the system, and which is therefore expressible
in the form
xi" = fi{f1(x,
a), ... , fn(x, a); b1,
... , br} = fi(x1,
... , xn; c1, ... , cr)
where c1, ... , cr
are certain functions of a1, ... , ar
and b1, ... , br. The group
property thus finds its full expression in a system of functional
equations and of itself imposes no additional restrictions upon
the functions f1, ... , fn;
c1, ... , cr. Yet Lie's further
treatment of these functional equations, viz., the derivation of
the well-known fundamental differential equations, assumes necessarily
the continuity and differentiability of the functions defining the
group.
As regards continuity:
this postulate will certainly be retained for the present--if only
with a view to the geometrical and arithmetical applications, in
which the continuity of the functions in question appears as a consequence
of the axiom of continuity. On the other hand the differentiability
of the functions defining the group contains a postulate which,
in the geometrical axioms, can be expressed only in a rather forced
and complicated manner. Hence there arises the question whether,
through the introduction of suitable new variables and parameters,
the group can always be transformed into one whose defining functions
are differentiable; or whether, at least with the help of certain
simple assumptions, a transformation is possible into groups admitting
Lie's methods. A reduction to analytic groups is, according to a
theorem announced by Lie10
but first proved by Schur,11
always possible when the group is transitive and the existence of
the first and certain second derivatives of the functions defining
the group is assumed.
For infinite groups the
investigation of the corresponding question is, I believe, also
of interest. Moreover we are thus led to the wide and interesting
field of functional equations which have been heretofore investigated
usually only under the assumption of the differentiability of the
functions involved. In particular the functional equations treated
by Abel12 with so
much ingenuity, the difference equations, and other equations occurring
in the literature of mathematics, do not directly involve anything
which necessitates the requirement of the differentiability of the
accompanying functions. In the search for certain existence proofs
in the calculus of variations I came directly upon the problem:
To prove the differentiability of the function under consideration
from the existence of a difference equation. In all these cases,
then, the problem arises: In how far are the assertions which
we can make in the case of differentiable functions true under proper
modifications without this assumption?
It may be further remarked
that H. Minkowski in his above-mentioned Geometrie der Zahlen
starts with the functional equation
f(x1 + y1, ... , xn
+ yn)
f(x1, ... , xn) + f(y1,
... , yn)
and from this actually succeeds in proving the
existence of certain differential quotients for the function in
question.
On the other hand I wish
to emphasize the fact that there certainly exist analytical functional
equations whose sole solutions are non-differentiable functions.
For example a uniform continuous non-differentiable function (x)
can be constructed which represents the only solution of the two
functional equations
(x
+ )
- (x)
= f(x),
(x
+ )
- (x)
= 0
where
and
are two real numbers, and f(x) denotes, for all the
real values of x, a regular analytic uniform function. Such
functions are obtained in the simplest manner by means of trigonometrical
series by a process similar to that used by Borel (according to
a recent announcement of Picard)13
for the construction of a doubly periodic, non-analytic solution
of a certain analytic partial differential equation.
6. Mathematical treatment of the axioms of physics
The investigations on the foundations of geometry
suggest the problem: To treat in the same manner, by means of
axioms, those physical sciences in which mathematics plays an important
part; in the first rank are the theory of probabilities and mechanics.
As to the axioms of the
theory of probabilities,14
it seems to me desirable that their logical investigation should
be accompanied by a rigorous and satisfactory development of the
method of mean values in mathematical physics, and in particular
in the kinetic theory of gases.
Important investigations
by physicists on the foundations of mechanics are at hand; I refer
to the writings of Mach,15
Hertz,16 Boltzmann17
and Volkmann. 18
It is therefore very desirable that the discussion of the foundations
of mechanics be taken up by mathematicians also. Thus Boltzmann's
work on the principles of mechanics suggests the problem of developing
mathematically the limiting processes, there merely indicated, which
lead from the atomistic view to the laws of motion of continua.
Conversely one might try to derive the laws of the motion of rigid
bodies by a limiting process from a system of axioms depending upon
the idea of continuously varying conditions of a material filling
all space continuously, these conditions being defined by parameters.
For the question as to the equivalence of different systems of axioms
is always of great theoretical interest.
If geometry is to serve
as a model for the treatment of physical axioms, we shall try first
by a small number of axioms to include as large a class as possible
of physical phenomena, and then by adjoining new axioms to arrive
gradually at the more special theories. At the same time Lie's a
principle of subdivision can perhaps be derived from profound theory
of infinite transformation groups. The mathematician will have also
to take account not only of those theories coming near to reality,
but also, as in geometry, of all logically possible theories. He
must be always alert to obtain a complete survey of all conclusions
derivable from the system of axioms assumed.
Further, the mathematician
has the duty to test exactly in each instance whether the new axioms
are compatible with the previous ones. The physicist, as his theories
develop, often finds himself forced by the results of his experiments
to make new hypotheses, while he depends, with respect to the compatibility
of the new hypotheses with the old axioms, solely upon these experiments
or upon a certain physical intuition, a practice which in the rigorously
logical building up of a theory is not admissible. The desired proof
of the compatibility of all assumptions seems to me also of importance,
because the effort to obtain such proof always forces us most effectually
to an exact formulation of the axioms.
So far we
have considered only questions concerning the foundations of the
mathematical sciences. Indeed, the study of the foundations of a
science is always particularly attractive, and the testing of these
foundations will always be among the foremost problems of the investigator.
Weierstrass once said, "The final object always to be kept
in mind is to arrive at a correct understanding of the foundations
of the science. ... But to make any progress in the sciences the
study of particular problems is, of course, indispensable."
In fact, a thorough understanding of its special theories is necessary
to the successful treatment of the foundations of the science. Only
that architect is in the position to lay a sure foundation for a
structure who knows its purpose thoroughly and in detail. So we
turn now to the special problems of the separate branches of mathematics
and consider first arithmetic and algebra.
7. Irrationality and transcendence of certain numbers
Hermite's arithmetical theorems on the exponential
function and their extension by Lindemann are certain of the admiration
of all generations of mathematicians. Thus the task at once presents
itself to penetrate further along the path here entered, as A. Hurwitz
has already done in two interesting papers,19
"Ueber arithmetische Eigenschaften gewisser transzendenter
Funktionen." I should like, therefore, to sketch a class of
problems which, in my opinion, should be attacked as here next in
order. That certain special transcendental functions, important
in analysis, take algebraic values for certain algebraic arguments,
seems to us particularly remarkable and worthy of thorough investigation.
Indeed, we expect transcendental functions to assume, in general,
transcendental values for even algebraic arguments; and, although
it is well known that there exist integral transcendental functions
which even have rational values for all algebraic arguments, we
shall still con sider it highly probable that the exponential function
ei z,
for example, which evidently has algebraic values for all rational
arguments z, will on the other hand always take transcendental
values for irrational algebraic values of the argument z.
We can also give this statement a geometrical form, as follows:
If, in an isosceles
triangle, the ratio of the base angle to the angle at the vertex
be algebraic but not rational, the ratio between base and side is
always transcendental.
In spite of the simplicity
of this statement and of its similarity to the problems solved by
Hermite and Lindemann, I consider the proof of this theorem very
difficult; as also the proof that
The expression  ,
for an algebraic base
and an irrational algebraic exponent ,
e. g., the number 2
or e
= i-2i, always represents a transcendental
or at least an irrational number.
It is certain that the
solution of these and similar problems must lead us to entirely
new methods and to a new insight into the nature of special irrational
and transcendental numbers.
8. Problems of prime numbers
Essential progress in the theory of the distribution
of prime numbers has lately been made by Hadamard, de la Valle-Poussin,
Von Mangoldt and others. For the complete solution, however, of
the problems set us by Riemann's paper "Ueber die Anzahl der
Primzahlen unter einer gegebenen Grsse," it still remains
to prove the correctness of an exceedingly important statement of
Riemann, viz., that the zero points of the function (s)
defined by the series
![[definition of the Riemann zeta function]](../Images/disp1.gif)
all have the real part 1/2, except
the well-known negative integral real zeros. As soon as this
proof has been successfully established, the next problem would
consist in testing more exactly Riemann's infinite series for the
number of primes below a given number and, especially, to decide
whether the difference between the number of primes below a number
x and the integral logarithm of x does in fact become infinite of
an order not greater than 1/2 in x.20
Further, we should determine whether the occasional condensation
of prime numbers which has been noticed in counting primes is really
due to those terms of Riemann's formula which depend upon the first
complex zeros of the function (s).
After an exhaustive discussion
of Riemann's prime number formula, perhaps we may sometime be in
a position to attempt the rigorous solution of Goldbach's problem,21
viz., whether every integer is expressible as the sum of two positive
prime numbers; and further to attack the well-known question, whether
there are an infinite number of pairs of prime numbers with the
difference 2, or even the more general problem, whether the linear
diophantine equation
ax + by + c = 0
(with given integral coefficients each prime to
the others) is always solvable in prime numbers x and y.
But the following problem
seems to me of no less interest and perhaps of still wider range:
To apply the results obtained for the distribution of rational
prime numbers to the theory of the distribution of ideal primes
in a given number-field k--a problem which looks toward the study
of the function k(s)
belonging to the field and defined by the series
![[definition of the zeta_k function]](../Images/disp2.gif)
where the sum extends over all ideals j
of the given realm k, and n(j) denotes the
norm of the ideal j.
I may mention three more
special problems in number theory: one on the laws of reciprocity,
one on diophantine equations, and a third from the realm of quadratic
forms.
9. Proof of the most general law of reciprocity in any number
field
For any field of numbers the law of reciprocity is to be proved
for the residues of the l-th power, when l denotes an
odd prime, and further when l is a power of 2 or a power
of an odd prime.
The law, as well as the
means essential to its proof, will, I believe, result by suitably
generalizing the theory of the field of the l-th roots of
unity,22 developed
by me, and my theory of relative quadratic fields.23
10. Determination of the solvability of a diophantine equation
Given a diophantine equation with any number
of unknown quantities and with rational integral numerical coefficients:
to devise a process according to which it can be determined by
a finite number of operations whether the equation is solvable in
rational integers.
11. Quadratic forms with any algebraic numerical coefficients
Our present knowledge of the theory of quadratic
number fields24 puts
us in a position to attack successfully the theory of quadratic
forms with any number of variables and with any algebraic numerical
coefficients. This leads in particular to the interesting problem:
to solve a given quadratic equation with algebraic numerical coefficients
in any number of variables by integral or fractional numbers belonging
to the algebraic realm of rationality determined by the coefficients.
The following important
problem may form a transition to algebra and the theory of functions:
12. Extension of Kroneker's theorem on abelian fields to any algebraic
realm of rationality
The theorem that every abelian number field
arises from the realm of rational numbers by the composition of
fields of roots of unity is due to Kronecker. This fundamental theorem
in the theory of integral equations contains two statements, namely:
First. It answers the
question as to the number and existence of those equations which
have a given degree, a given abelian group and a given discriminant
with respect to the realm of rational numbers.
Second. It states that
the roots of such equations form a realm of algebraic numbers which
coincides with the realm obtained by assigning to the argument z
in the exponential function ei z
all rational numerical values in succession.
The first statement is
concerned with the question of the determination of certain algebraic
numbers by their groups and their branching. This question corresponds,
therefore, to the known problem of the determination of algebraic
functions corresponding to given Riemann surfaces. The second statement
furnishes the required numbers by transcendental means, namely,
by the exponential function ei z.
Since the realm of the
imaginary quadratic number fields is the simplest after the realm
of rational numbers, the problem arises, to extend Kronecker's theorem
to this case. Kronecker himself has made the assertion that the
abelian equations in the realm of a quadratic field are given by
the equations of transformation of elliptic functions with singular
moduli, so that the elliptic function assumes here the same role
as the exponential function in the former case. The proof of Kronecker's
conjecture has not yet been furnished; but I believe that it must
be obtainable without very great difficulty on the basis of the
theory of complex multiplication developed by H. Weber25
with the help of the purely arithmetical theorems on class fields
which I have established.
Finally, the extension
of Kronecker's theorem to the case that, in place of the realm
of rational numbers or of the imaginary quadratic field, any algebraic
field whatever is laid down as realm of rationality, seems to
me of the greatest importance. I regard this problem as one of the
most profound and far reaching in the theory of numbers and of functions.
The problem is found
to be accessible from many standpoints. I regard as the most important
key to the arithmetical part of this problem the general law of
reciprocity for residues of I-th powers within any given
number field.
As to the function-theoretical
part of the problem, the investigator in this attractive region
will be guided by the remarkable analogies which are noticeable
between the theory of algebraic functions of one variable and the
theory of algebraic numbers. Hensel26
has proposed and investigated the analogue in the theory of algebraic
numbers to the development in power series of an algebraic function;
and Landsberg27 has
treated the analogue of the Riemann-Roch theorem. The analogy between
the deficiency of a Riemann surface and that of the class number
of a field of numbers is also evident. Consider a Riemann surface
of deficiency p = 1 (to touch on the simplest case only)
and on the other hand a number field of class h = 2. To the
proof of the existence of an integral everywhere finite on the Riemann
surface, corresponds the proof of the existence of an integer a
in the number field such that the number
represents a quadratic field, relatively unbranched with respect
to the fundamental field. In the theory of algebraic functions,
the method of boundary values (Randwerthaufgabe) serves,
as is well known, for the proof of Riemann's existence theorem.
In the theory of number fields also, the proof of the existence
of just this number a offers the greatest difficulty. This
proof succeeds with indispensable assistance from the theorem that
in the number field there are always prime ideals corresponding
to given residual properties. This latter fact is therefore the
analogue in number theory to the problem of boundary values.
The equation of Abel's
theorem in the theory of algebraic functions expresses, as is well
known, the necessary and sufficient condition that the points in
question on the Riemann surface are the zero points of an algebraic
function belonging to the surface. The exact analogue of Abel's
theorem, in the theory of the number field of class h = 2,
is the equation of the law of quadratic reciprocity28

which declares that the ideal j is then
and only then a principal ideal of the number field when the quadratic
residue of the number a with respect to the ideal j
is positive.
It will be seen that
in the problem just sketched the three fundamental branches of mathematics,
number theory, algebra and function theory, come into closest touch
with one another, and I am certain that the theory of analytical
functions of several variables in particular would be notably enriched
if one should succeed in finding and discussing those functions
which play the part for any algebraic number field corresponding
to that of the exponential function in the field of rational numbers
and of the elliptic modular functions in the imaginary quadratic
number field.
Passing to algebra, I
shall mention a problem from the theory of equations and one to
which the theory of algebraic invariants has led me.
13. Impossibility of the solution of the general equation of the
7-th degree by means of functions of only two arguments
Nomography29
deals with the problem: to solve equations by means of drawings
of families of curves depending on an arbitrary parameter. It is
seen at once that every root of an equation whose coefficients depend
upon only two parameters, that is, every function of two independent
variables, can be represented in manifold ways according to the
principle lying at the foundation of nomography. Further, a large
class of functions of three or more variables can evidently be represented
by this principle alone without the use of variable elements, namely
all those which can be generated by forming first a function of
two arguments, then equating each of these arguments to a function
of two arguments, next replacing each of those arguments in their
turn by a function of two arguments, and so on, regarding as admissible
any finite number of insertions of functions of two arguments. So,
for example, every rational function of any number of arguments
belongs to this class of functions constructed by nomographic tables;
for it can be generated by the processes of addition, subtraction,
multiplication and division and each of these processes produces
a function of only two arguments. One sees easily that the roots
of all equations which are solvable by radicals in the natural realm
of rationality belong to this class of functions; for here the extraction
of roots is adjoined to the four arithmetical operations and this,
indeed, presents a function of one argument only. Likewise the general
equations of the 5-th and 6-th degrees are solvable by suitable
nomographic tables; for, by means of Tschirnhausen transformations,
which require only extraction of roots, they can be reduced to a
form where the coefficients depend upon two parameters only.
Now it is probable that
the root of the equation of the seventh degree is a function of
its coefficients which does not belong to this class of functions
capable of nomographic construction, i. e., that it cannot
be constructed by a finite number of insertions of functions of
two arguments. In order to prove this, the proof would be necessary
that the equation of the seventh degree f7
+ xf3 + yf2 + zf + 1
= 0 is not solvable with the help of any continuous functions
of only two arguments. I may be allowed to add that I have satisfied
myself by a rigorous process that there exist analytical functions
of three arguments x, y, z which cannot be obtained by a
finite chain of functions of only two arguments.
By employing auxiliary
movable elements, nomography succeeds in constructing functions
of more than two arguments, as d'Ocagne has recently proved in the
case of the equation of the 7-th degree.30
14. Proof of the finiteness of certain complete systems of functions
In the theory of algebraic invariants, questions
as to the finiteness of complete systems of forms deserve, as it
seems to me, particular interest. L. Maurer31
has lately succeeded in extending the theorems on finiteness in
invariant theory proved by P. Gordan and myself, to the case where,
instead of the general projective group, any subgroup is chosen
as the basis for the definition of invariants.
An important step in
this direction had been taken al ready by A. Hurwitz,32
who, by an ingenious process, succeeded in effecting the proof,
in its entire generality, of the finiteness of the system of orthogonal
invariants of an arbitrary ground form.
The study of the question
as to the finiteness of invariants has led me to a simple problem
which includes that question as a particular case and whose solution
probably requires a decidedly more minutely detailed study of the
theory of elimination and of Kronecker's algebraic modular systems
than has yet been made.
Let a number m
of integral rational functions Xl, X2,
... , Xm, of the n variables xl,
x2, ... , xn be given,
| (S) |
|
X1 = f1(x1,
... , xn),
X2 = f2(x1,
... , xn),
...
Xm = fm(x1,
... , xn). |
Every rational
integral combination of Xl, ... , Xm
must evidently always become, after substitution of the above expressions,
a rational integral function of xl, ... , xn.
Nevertheless, there may well be rational fractional functions of
Xl, ... , Xm which, by the operation
of the substitution S, become integral functions in xl,
... , xn. Every such rational function of Xl,
... , Xm, which becomes integral in xl,
... , xn after the application of the substitution
S, I propose to call a relatively integral function
of Xl, ... , Xm. Every integral
function of Xl, ... , Xm is
evidently also relatively integral; further the sum, difference
and product of relative integral functions are themselves relatively
integral.
The resulting problem
is now to decide whether it is always possible to find a finite
system of relatively integral function Xl,
... , Xm by which every other relatively integral
function of Xl, ... , Xm
may be expressed rationally and integrally.
We can formulate the
problem still more simply if we introduce the idea of a finite field
of integrality. By a finite field of integrality I mean a system
of functions from which a finite number of functions can be chosen,
in terms of which all other functions of the system are rationally
and integrally expressible. Our problem amounts, then, to this:
to show that all relatively integral functions of any given domain
of rationality always constitute a finite field of integrality.
It naturally occurs to
us also to refine the problem by restrictions drawn from number
theory, by assuming the coefficients of the given functions fl,
... , fm to be integers and including among the
relatively integral functions of Xl, ... , Xm
only such rational functions of these arguments as become, by the
application of the substitutions S, rational integral functions
of xl, ... , xn with rational
integral coefficients.
The following is a simple
particular case of this refined problem: Let m integral rational
functions Xl, ... , Xm of one
variable x with integral rational coefficients, and a prime
number p be given. Consider the system of those integral
rational functions of x which can be expressed in the form
G(Xl, ... , Xm) /
ph,
where G is a rational integral function
of the arguments Xl, ... , Xm
and ph is any power of the prime number p.
Earlier investigations of mine33
show immediately that all such expressions for a fixed exponent
h form a finite domain of integrality. But the question here
is whether the same is true for all exponents h, i. e.,
whether a finite number of such expressions can be chosen by means
of which for every exponent h every other expression of that
form is integrally and rationally expressible.
From the boundary region
between algebra and geometry, I will mention two problems. The one
concerns enumerative geometry and the other the topology of algebraic
curves and surfaces.
15. Rigorous foundation of Schubert's enumerative calculus
The problem consists in this: To establish
rigorously and with an exact determination of the limits of their
validity those geometrical numbers which Schubert34
especially has determined on the basis of the so-called principle
of special position, or conservation of number, by means of the
enumerative calculus developed by him.
Although the algebra
of today guarantees, in principle, the possibility of carrying out
the processes of elimination, yet for the proof of the theorems
of enumerative geometry decidedly more is requisite, namely, the
actual carrying out of the process of elimination in the case of
equations of special form in such a way that the degree of the final
equations and the multiplicity of their solutions may be foreseen.
16. Problem of the topology of algebraic curves and surfaces
The maximum number of closed and separate
branches which a plane algebraic curve of the n-th order
can have has been determined by Harnack.35
There arises the further question as to the relative position of
the branches in the plane. As to curves of the 6-th order, I have
satisfied myself--by a complicated process, it is true--that of
the eleven branches which they can have according to Harnack, by
no means all can lie external to one another, but that one branch
must exist in whose interior one branch and in whose exterior nine
branches lie, or inversely. A thorough investigation of the relative
position of the separate branches when their number is the maximum
seems to me to be of very great interest, and not less so the corresponding
investigation as to the number, form, and position of the sheets
of an algebraic surface in space. Till now, indeed, it is not
even known what is the maxi mum number of sheets which a surface
of the 4-th order in three dimensional space can really have.36
In connection with this
purely algebraic problem, I wish to bring forward a question which,
it seems to me, may be attacked by the same method of continuous
variation of coefficients, and whose answer is of corresponding
value for the topology of families of curves defined by differential
equations. This is the question as to the maximum number and position
of Poincar's boundary cycles (cycles limites) for a differential
equation of the first order and degree of the form

where X and Y are rational integral
functions of the n-th degree in x and y. Written
homogeneously, this is

where X, Y, and Z are rational integral homogeneous
functions of the n-th degree in x, y, z, and the latter
are to be determined as functions of the parameter t.
17. Expression of definite forms by squares
A rational integral function or form in any
number of variables with real coefficient such that it becomes negative
for no real values of these variables, is said to be definite. The
system of all definite forms is invariant with respect to the operations
of addition and multiplication, but the quotient of two definite
forms--in case it should be an integral function of the variables--is
also a definite form. The square of any form is evidently always
a definite form. But since, as I have shown,37
not every definite form can be compounded by addition from squares
of forms, the question arises--which I have answered affirmatively
for ternary forms38--whether
every definite form may not be expressed as a quotient of sums of
squares of forms. At the same time it is desirable, for certain
questions as to the possibility of certain geometrical constructions,
to know whether the coefficients of the forms to be used in the
expression may always be taken from the realm of rationality given
by the coefficients of the form represented.39
I mention one more geometrical
problem:
18. Building up of space from congruent polyhedra
If we enquire for those groups of motions
in the plane for which a fundamental region exists, we obtain various
answers, according as the plane considered is Riemann's (elliptic),
Euclid's, or Lobachevsky's (hyperbolic). In the case of the elliptic
plane there is a finite number of essentially different kinds of
fundamental regions, and a finite number of congruent regions suffices
for a complete covering of the whole plane; the group consists indeed
of a finite number of motions only. In the case of the hyperbolic
plane there is an infinite number of essentially different kinds
of fundamental regions, namely, the well-known Poincar polygons.
For the complete covering of the plane an infinite number of congruent
regions is necessary. The case of Euclid's plane stands between
these; for in this case there is only a finite number of essentially
different kinds of groups of motions with fundamental regions, but
for a complete covering of the whole plane an infinite number of
congruent regions is necessary.
Exactly the corresponding
facts are found in space of three dimensions. The fact of the finiteness
of the groups of motions in elliptic space is an immediate consequence
of a fundamental theorem of C. Jordan,40
whereby the number of essentially different kinds of finite groups
of linear substitutions in n variables does not surpass a
certain finite limit dependent upon n. The groups of motions
with fundamental regions in hyperbolic space have been investigated
by Fricke and Klein in the lectures on the theory of automorphic
functions,41 and
finally Fedorov,42
Schoenflies43 and
lately Rohn44 have
given the proof that there are, in euclidean space, only a finite
number of essentially different kinds of groups of motions with
a fundamental region. Now, while the results and methods of proof
applicable to elliptic and hyperbolic space hold directly for n-dimensional
space also, the generalization of the theorem for euclidean space
seems to offer decided difficulties. The investigation of the following
question is therefore desirable: Is there in n-dimensional euclidean
space also only a finite number of essentially different kinds of
groups of motions with a fundamental region?
A fundamental region
of each group of motions, together with the congruent regions arising
from the group, evidently fills up space completely. The question
arises: whether polyhedra also exist which do not appear as fundamental
regions of groups of motions, by means of which nevertheless by
a suitable juxtaposition of congruent copies a complete filling
up of all space is possible. I point out the following question,
related to the preceding one, and important to number theory and
perhaps sometimes useful to physics and chemistry: How can one arrange
most densely in space an infinite number of equal solids of given
form, e. g., spheres with given radii or regular tetrahedra
with given edges (or in prescribed position), that is, how can one
so fit them together that the ratio of the filled to the unfilled
space may be as great as possible?
If we look over the development of the theory
of functions in the last century, we notice above all the fundamental
importance of that class of functions which we now designate as
analytic functions--a class of functions which will probably stand
permanently in the center of mathematical interest.
There are many different
standpoints from which we might choose, out of the totality of all
conceivable functions, extensive classes worthy of a particularly
thorough investigation. Consider, for example, the class of functions
characterized by ordinary or partial algebraic differential equations.
It should be observed that this class does not contain the functions
that arise in number theory and whose investigation is of the greatest
importance. For example, the before-mentioned function (s)
satisfies no algebraic differential equation, as is easily seen
with the help of the well-known relation between (s)
and (1
- s), if one refers to the theorem proved by Hlder,45
that the function (x)
satisfies no algebraic differential equation. Again, the function
of the two variables s and l defined by the infinite
series

which stands in close relation with the function (s),
probably satisfies no algebraic partial differential equation. In
the investigation of this question the functional equation

will have to be used.
If, on the other hand,
we are lead by arithmetical or geometrical reasons to consider the
class of all those functions which are continuous and indefinitely
differentiable, we should be obliged in its investigation to dispense
with that pliant instrument, the power series, and with the circumstance
that the function is fully determined by the assignment of values
in any region, however small. While, therefore, the former limitation
of the field of functions was too narrow, the latter seems to me
too wide. The idea of the analytic function on the other hand includes
the whole wealth of functions most important to science whether
they have their origin in number theory, in the theory of differential
equations or of algebraic functional equations,whether they arise
in geometry or in mathematical physics; and, therefore, in the entire
realm of functions, the analytic function justly holds undisputed
supremacy.
19. Are the solutions of regular problems in the calculus of variations
always necessarily analytic?
One of the most remarkable facts in the elements
of the theory of analytic functions appears to me to be this: That
there exist partial differential equations whose integrals are all
of necessity analytic functions of the independent variables, that
is, in short, equations susceptible of none but analytic solutions.
The best known partial differential equations of this kind are the
potential equation

and certain linear differential equations investigated
by Picard;46 also
the equation

the partial differential equation of minimal surfaces,
and others. Most of these partial differential equations have the
common characteristic of being the lagrangian differential equations
of certain problems of variation, viz., of such problems of variation

as satisfy, for all values of the arguments which
fall within the range of discussion, the inequality

F itself being an analytic function. We
shall call this sort of problem a regular variation problem. It
is chiefly the regular variation problems that play a role in geometry,
in mechanics, and in mathematical physics; and the question naturally
arises, whether all solutions of regular variation problems must
necessarily be analytic functions. In other words, does every
lagrangian partial differential equation of a regular variation
problem have the property of admitting analytic integrals exclusively?
And is this the case even when the function is constrained to assume,
as, e. g., in Dirichlet's problem on the potential function,
boundary values which are continuous, but not analytic?
I may add that there
exist surfaces of constant negative gaussian curvature which
are representable by functions that are continuous and possess indeed
all the derivatives, and yet are not analytic; while on the other
hand it is probable that every surface whose gaussian curvature
is constant and positive is necessarily an analytic surface. And
we know that the surfaces of positive constant curvature are most
closely related to this regular variation problem: To pass through
a closed curve in space a surface of minimal area which shall inclose,
in connection with a fixed surface through the same closed curve,
a volume of given magnitude.
20. The general problem of boundary values
An important problem closely connected with
the foregoing is the question concerning the existence of solutions
of partial differential equations when the values on the boundary
of the region are prescribed. This problem is solved in the main
by the keen methods of H. A. Schwarz, C. Neumann, and Poincar for
the differential equation of the potential. These methods, however,
seem to be generally not capable of direct extension to the case
where along the boundary there are prescribed either the differential
coefficients or any relations between these and the values of the
function. Nor can they be extended immediately to the case where
the inquiry is not for potential surfaces but, say, for surfaces
of least area, or surfaces of constant positive gaussian curvature,
which are to pass through a prescribed twisted curve or to stretch
over a given ring surface. It is my conviction that it will be possible
to prove these existence theorems by means of a general principle
whose nature is indicated by Dirichlet's principle. This general
principle will then perhaps enable us to approach the question:
Has not every regular variation problem a solution, provided
certain assumptions regarding the given boundary conditions are
satisfied (say that the functions concerned in these boundary
conditions are continuous and have in sections one or more derivatives),
and provided also if need be that the notion of a solution shall
be suitably extended?47
21. Proof of the existence of linear differential equations having
a prescribed monodromic group
In the theory of linear differential equations
with one independent variable z, I wish to indicate an important
problem one which very likely Riemann himself may have had in mind.
This problem is as follows: To show that there always exists
a linear differential equation of the Fuchsian class, with given
singular points and monodromic group. The problem requires the
production of n functions of the variable z, regular
throughout the complex z-plane except at the given singular
points; at these points the functions may become infinite of only
finite order, and when z describes circuits about these
points the functions shall undergo the prescribed linear substitutions.
The existence of such differential equations has been shown to be
probable by counting the constants, but the rigorous proof has been
obtained up to this time only in the particular case where the fundamental
equations of the given substitutions have roots all of absolute
magnitude unity. L. Schlesinger has given this proof,48
based upon Poincar's theory of the Fuchsian -functions.
The theory of linear differential equations would evidently have
a more finished appearance if the problem here sketched could be
disposed of by some perfectly general method.
22. Uniformization of analytic relations by means of automorphic
functions
As Poincar was the first to prove, it is
always possible to reduce any algebraic relation between two variables
to uniformity by the use of automorphic functions of one variable.
That is, if any algebraic equation in two variables be given, there
can always be found for these variables two such single valued automorphic
functions of a single variable that their substitution renders the
given algebraic equation an identity. The generalization of this
fundamental theorem to any analytic non-algebraic relations whatever
between two variables has likewise been attempted with success by
Poincar,49 though
by a way entirely different from that which served him in the special
problem first mentioned. From Poincar's proof of the possibility
of reducing to uniformity an arbitrary analytic relation between
two variables, however, it does not become apparent whether the
resolving functions can be determined to meet certain additional
conditions. Namely, it is not shown whether the two single valued
functions of the one new variable can be so chosen that, while this
variable traverses the regular domain of those functions, the totality
of all regular points of the given analytic field are actually reached
and represented. On the contrary it seems to be the case, from Poincar's
investigations, that there are beside the branch points certain
others, in general infinitely many other discrete exceptional points
of the analytic field, that can be reached only by making the new
variable approach certain limiting points of the functions. In
view of the fundamental importance of Poincar's formulation of
the question it seems to me that an elucidation and resolution of
this difficulty is extremely desirable.
In conjunction with this
problem comes up the problem of reducing to uniformity an algebraic
or any other analytic relation among three or more complex variables--a
problem which is known to be solvable in many particular cases.
Toward the solution of this the recent investigations of Picard
on algebraic functions of two variables are to be regarded as welcome
and important preliminary studies.
23. Further development of the methods of the calculus of variations
So far, I have generally mentioned problems
as definite and special as possible, in the opinion that it is just
such definite and special problems that attract us the most and
from which the most lasting influence is often exerted upon science.
Nevertheless, I should like to close with a general problem, namely
with the indication of a branch of mathematics repeatedly mentioned
in this lecture--which, in spite of the considerable advancement
lately given it by Weierstrass, does not receive the general appreciation
which, in my opinion, is its due--I mean the calculus of variations.50
The lack of interest
in this is perhaps due in part to the need of reliable modern text
books. So much the more praiseworthy is it that A. Kneser in a very
recently published work has treated the calculus of variations from
the modern points of view and with regard to the modern demand for
rigor.51
The calculus of variations
is, in the widest sense, the theory of the variation of functions,
and as such appears as a necessary extension of the differential
and integral calculus. In this sense, Poincar's investigations
on the problem of three bodies, for example, form a chapter in the
calculus of variations, in so far as Poincar derives from known
orbits by the principle of variation new orbits of similar character.
I add here a short justification
of the general remarks upon the calculus of variations made at the
beginning of my lecture.
The simplest problem
in the calculus of variations proper is known to consist in finding
a function y of a variable x such that the definite
integral

assumes a minimum value as compared with the values
it takes when y is replaced by other functions of x
with the same initial and final values.
The vanishing of the
first variation in the usual sense
J
= 0
gives for the desired function y the well-known
differential equation

In order
to investigate more closely the necessary and sufficient criteria
for the occurrence of the required minimum, we consider the integral

Now we
inquire how p is to be chosen as function of x, y in order that
the value of this integral J* shall be independent of the path of
integration, i. e., of the choice of the function y of the variable
x. The integral J* has the form

where A and B do not contain y,
and the vanishing of the first variation
J*
= 0
in the sense which the new question requires gives
the equation

i. e., we obtain for the function p
of the two variables x, y the partial differential equation
of the first order

The ordinary
differential equation of the second order (l) and the partial differential
equation (1*) stand in the closest relation to each other. This
relation becomes immediately clear to us by the following simple
transformation

We derive
from this, namely, the following facts: If we construct any simple
family of integral curves of the ordinary differential equation
(l) of the second order and then form an ordinary differential equation
of the first order
which also admits these integral curves as solutions,
then the function p(x, y) is always an integral of
the partial differential equation (1*) of the first order; and conversely,
if p(x, y) denotes any solution of the partial differential
equation (1*) of the first order, all the non-singular integrals
of the ordinary differential equation (2) of the first order are
at the same time integrals of the differential equation (l) of the
second order, or in short if yx = p(x,
y) is an integral equation of the first order of the differential
equation (l) of the second order, p(x, y) represents
an integral of the partial differential equation (1*) and conversely;
the integral curves of the ordinary differential equation of the
second order are therefore, at the same time, the characteristics
of the partial differential equation (1*) of the first order.
In the present case we
may find the same result by means of a simple calculation; for this
gives us the differential equations (1) and (1*) in question in
the form
| (1) |
yxx
Fyxyx + yx
Fyxy + yxx Fyxx
- Fy = 0, |
| (1*) |
(px
+ ppx) Fpp + p Fpy
+ Fpx - Fy = 0, |
where the lower indices indicate the partial derivatives
with respect to x, y, p, yx. The correctness of
the affirmed relation is clear from this.
The close relation derived
before and just proved between the ordinary differential equation
(1) of the second order and the partial differential equation (1*)
of the first order, is, as it seems to me, of fundamental significance
for the calculus of variations. For, from the fact that the integral
J* is independent of the path of integration it follows that

if we think of the left hand integral as taken
along any path y and the right hand integral along an integral
curve
of the differential equation

With the
help of equation (3) we arrive at Weierstrass's formula

where E designates Weierstrass's expression,
depending upon yx, p, y, x,
E(yx, p) = F(yx)
- F(p) - (yx - p) Fp(p),
Since, therefore,
the solution depends only on finding an integral p(x,
y) which is single valued and continuous in a certain neighborhood
of the integral curve ,
which we are considering, the developments just indicated lead immediately--without
the introduction of the second variation, but only by the application
of the polar process to the differential equation (1)--to the expression
of Jacobi's condition and to the answer to the question: How far
this condition of Jacobi's in conjunction with Weierstrass's condition
E > 0 is necessary and sufficient for the occurrence of
a minimum.
The developments indicated
may be transferred without necessitating further calculation to
the case of two or more required functions, and also to the case
of a double or a multiple integral. So, for example, in the case
of a double integral

to be extended over a given region ,
the vanishing of the first variation (to be understood in the usual
sense)
J
= 0
gives the well-known differential equation of the
second order

for the required function z of x
and y.
On the other hand we
consider the integral

and inquire, how p and q are to be taken as
functions of x, y and z in order that the value of this integral
may be independent of the choice of the surface passing through
the given closed twisted curve, i. e., of the choice of the function
z of the variables x and y.
The integral J*
has the form

>and the vanishing of the first variation
J
= 0
in the sense which the new formulation of the question
demands, gives the equation

i. e., we find for the functions p
and q of the three variables x, y and z the
differential equation of the first order

If we add
to this differential equation the partial differential equation
resulting from the equations
zx = p(x, y, z),
zy = q(x, y, z)
the partial differential equation (I) for the function
z of the two variables x and y and the simultaneous
system of the two partial differential equations of the first order
(I*) for the two functions p and q of the three variables
x, y, and z stand toward one another in a relation
exactly analogous to that in which the differential equations (1)
and (1*) stood in the case of the simple integral.
It follows from the fact
that the integral J* is independent of the choice of the
surface of integration z that

if we think of the right hand integral as taken
over an integral surface z of the partial differential equations

and with the help of this formula we arrive at
once at the formula
[E(zx, zy, p, q) = F(zx,
zy) - F(p, q) - (zx
- p)Fp(p, q) -
(zy - q)Fq(p)Fp(p,
q)],
which plays the same role for the variation of
double integrals as the previously given formula (4) for simple
integrals. With the help of this formula we can now answer the question
how far Jacobi's condition in conjunction with Weierstrass's condition
E > 0 is necessary and sufficient for the occurrence of
a minimum.
Connected with these
developments is the modified form in which A. Kneser,52
beginning from other points of view, has presented Weierstrass's
theory. While Weierstrass employed integral curves of equation (1)
which pass through a fixed point in order to derive sufficient conditions
for the extreme values, Kneser on the other hand makes use of any
simple family of such curves and constructs for every such family
a solution, characteristic for that family, of that partial differential
equation which is to be considered as a generalization of the Jacobi-Hamilton
equation.
The problems mentioned are merely samples of problems,
yet they will suffice to show how rich, how manifold and how extensive
the mathematical science of today is, and the question is urged
upon us whether mathematics is doomed to the fate of those other
sciences that have split up into separate branches, whose representatives
scarcely understand one another and whose connection becomes ever
more loose. I do not believe this nor wish it. Mathematical science
is in my opinion an indivisible whole, an organism whose vitality
is conditioned upon the connection of its parts. For with all the
variety of mathematical knowledge, we are still clearly conscious
of the similarity of the logical devices, the relationship of the
ideas in mathematics as a whole and the numerous analogies in its
different departments. We also notice that, the farther a mathematical
theory is developed, the more harmoniously and uniformly does its
construction proceed, and unsuspected relations are disclosed between
hitherto separate branches of the science. So it happens that, with
the extension of mathematics, its organic character is not lost
but only manifests itself the more clearly.
But, we ask, with the
extension of mathematical knowledge will it not finally become impossible
for the single investigator to embrace all departments of this knowledge?
In answer let me point out how thoroughly it is ingrained in mathematical
science that every real advance goes hand in hand with the invention
of sharper tools and simpler methods which at the same time assist
in understanding earlier theories and cast aside older more complicated
developments. It is therefore possible for the individual investigator,
when he makes these sharper tools and simpler methods his own, to
find his way more easily in the various branches of mathematics
than is possible in any other science.
The organic unity of
mathematics is inherent in the nature of this science, for mathematics
is the foundation of all exact knowledge of natural phenomena. That
it may completely fulfil this high mission, may the new century
bring it gifted masters and many zealous and enthusiastic disciples!
Notes
1
Dr. Mary Winton Newson translated this address into English with
the author's permission for Bulletin of the American Mathematical
Society 8 (1902), 437-479. A reprint of appears in Mathematical
Developments Arising from Hilbert Problems, edited by Felix
Brouder, American Mathematical Society, 1976.
The original address
"Mathematische Probleme" appeared in Gttinger Nachrichten,
1900, pp. 253-297, and in Archiv der Mathematik und Physik,
(3) 1 (1901), 44-63 and 213-237. [A fuller title of the journal
Gttinger Nachrichten is Nachrichten von der Knigl. Gesellschaft
der Wiss. zu Gttingen.]
The French translation
by M. L. Laugel "Sur les problmes futurs des mathmatiques"
appeared in Compte Rendu du Deuxime Congrs International des
Mathmaticiens, pp. 58-114, Gauthier-Villars, Paris, 1902.
This HTML version of
Newson's translation was prepared for the web by D
Joyce with only minor modifications, mainly, more complete references.
2 H. Minkowski: Die Geometrie der Zahlen. Teubner,
Leipzig, 1896.
3 See Helmholtz, Ueber die Wechselwirkung der Natnrkrefte
und die darauf bezglichen neuesten Ermittelungen der Physik.
Vortrag gehalten Kigsberg, 1854.
4 P. Gordon: "ber homogene Functionen," Jahresbericht
der Deutchen Mathematiker-Vereinigung 8 (1900), p. 180.
5 Gauss Werke, vol. 8, pp. 241 and 244.
6 Cf., beside earlier literature, Hilbert, Grundlagen
der Geometrie, Teubner, Leipzig, 1899, ch. 4. [Translated as
Foundations of Geometry by Townsend, Open Court, Chicago,
1902.]
7 Since this was written M. Dehn has succeeded in proving
this impossibility. See his note: "Ueber raumgleishe Polyeder,"
in Gtt. Nachrichten, 1900, pp. 345-354, and a paper [then]
soon to appear in Math. Annalen ["Ueber den Rauminhalt,"
55 (1902), 465-478].
8 H. Minkowski: Die Geometrie der Zahlen. Teubner,
Leipzig, 1896.
9 D. Hilbert. "Ueber die gerade Linie als krzeste
Verbindung zweier Punkte," Math. Annalen, 46 (1895),
91-96.
10 S. Lie and F. Engel, Theorie der Transformationsgruppen,
vol. 3, Teubner, Leipzig, 1893, 82 and 144.
11 F. Schur: "Ueber den analytischen Charakter
der eine endliche continuierliche Transformationgruppe darstellenden
Functionen, " Math. Annalen 41 (1893), 509-538.
12 Abel: Werke, vol. 1, pp. 1, 61, 389.
13 . Picard: "Quelques thories fondamentales
dans l'analyse mathmatique," Confrences faites Clark University,
Revue gnrale des Sciences, 1900, p. 22.
14 Cf. G. Bohlmann, "Ueber Versicherungsmathematik,"
from the collection: F. Klein and E. Riecke, Ueber angewandte
Mathematik und Physik, Teubner, Leipzig, 1900.
15 E. Mach: Die Mechanik in ihrer Entwickelnng,
Brockhaus, Leipzig, 4th edition, 1901.
16 H. Hertz: Die Prinzipien der Mechanik,
Leipzig, 1894.
17 L. Boltzmann: Vorlesungen ber die Principe
der Mechanik, Leipzig, 1897.
18 P. Volkmann: Einfhrung in das Studium der
theoretischen Physik, Teubner, Leipzig, 1900.
19 A. Hurwitz: Math. Annalen 22 (1883), 211-229,
and 32 (1888), 583-588.
20 Cf. an article by H. von Koch, which is soon to
appear in Math. Annalen ["Ueber die Riemann'sche Primzahlfunction,"
55 (1902), 441-464].
21 Cf. M.-P. Stackel: "ber Goldbach's empirisches
Theorem," Gtt. Nachrichten, 1896, and Landau, ibid.,
1900.
22 D. Hilbert: Jahresber. d. Deutschen Math.-Vereinigung,
"Ueber die Theorie der algebraischen Zahlkrper," 4 (1897),
Part V (pp. 175-546).
23 D. Hilbert: "Ueber die Theorie des relativquadratischen
Zalhkrpers," Math. Annalen 51 (1899), 1-127, and Gtt.
Nachrichten, 1898.
24 D. Hilbert, "Ueber den Dirichlet'schen biquadratischen
Zahlenkrper," Math. Annalen, 45(1884); "Ueber
die Theorie der relativquadratischen Zahlkrper," Jahresber.
d. Deutschen Mathematiker-Vereinigung 6 (1897), 88-94, and Math.
Annalen, 51 (1899); "Ueber die Theorie der relativ-Abel'schen
Zahlkrper," Gtt. Nachrichten, 1898, pp. 370-399; Grundlagen
der Geometrie, Leipzig, 1899, Chap. VIII, 83 [Translation
by Townsend, Chicago, 1902]. Cf. also the dissertation of G. Ruckle,
Gttingen, 1901.
25 H. Weber: Elliptische Functionen und algebraische
Zahlen. Vieweg, Braunschweig, 1891.
26 K. Hensel: "ber eine neue Begrndung der
Theorie der algebraischen Zalen," Jahresber. d . Deutschen
Math.-Vereinigung 6 (1897), 83-88, and an article soon to appear
in Math. Annalen [55, (1902), 301]: "Ueber die Entwickelung
der algebraischen Zahlen in Potenzreihen."
27 G. Landsberg: "Ueber das Analogon des Riemann-Roch'schen
Satzes in der Theorie der algebraischen Zalen," Math. Annalen
50 (1898), 577-582.
28 Cf. Hilbert, "Ueber die Theorie der relativ-Abelschen
Zahlkrper," Gtt. Nachrichten, 1898, pp. 370-399.
29 M. d'Ocagne, Trait de Nomographie, Gauyhier-Villars,
Paris, 1899.
30 M. d'Ocagne: "Sur la rsolution nomographique
de l'quation du septime degr." Comptes rendus Paris,
131 (1900), 522-524.
31 Cf. L. Murer: Sitzungsber. d. K. Acad. d. Wiss.
zu Mnchen, 1899, and an article about to appear in Math.
Annalen.
32 A. Hurwitz: "Ueber die Erzeugung der Invarianten
durch Integration," Gtt. Nachrichten, 1897, pp. 71-90.
33 D. Hilbert: "Ueber die Theorie der algebraischen
Formen," Math. Annalen, 36 (1890), 473-534.
34 H. Schubert: Kalkl der abzhlenden Geometrie,
Teubner, Leipzig, 1879.
35 Harnack: "Ueber die Vieltheiligkeit der ebenen
algebraischen Curven," Math. Annalen, 10 (1876), 189-198.
36 Cf. K. Rohn, "Flchen vierter Ordnung,"
Preisschriften der Frstlich Jablonowskischen Gesellschaft,
Leipzig, 1886.
37 D. Hilbert: "Ueber die Darstellung definiter
Formen als Summen von Formenquadraten," Math. Annalen,
32 (1888), 342-350.
38 D. Hilbert: "ber ternre definite Formen,"
Acta Mathematica, 17 (1893), 169-198.
39 Cf. Hilbert Grundlagen der Geometrie, Leipzig,
1899, Chap. 7 and in particular 38.
40 C. Jordan: "Mmoire sur les quations diffrentielles
linaires intgrale algbrique," [Crelle's] Journal fr
die Reine und Angew. Math. 84 (1879), and Atti d. Reale Acad.
di Napoli, 1880.
41 R. Fricke and F. Klein: Vorlesungen ber die
Theoire der automorphen Functionen, Teubner, Leipzig, 1897.
Cf. especially Abschnitt I, Chapters 2 and 3.
42 E. Fedorov: Symmetrie der regelmssigen Systeme
von Figuren, l890.
43 A. Schoenflies: Krystallsysteme und Krystallstruktur,
Teubner, Leipzig, 1891.
44 K. Rohn: "Einige Stze ber regelmssige
Punktgruppen," Math. Annalen, 53 (1900), 440-449.
45 Hlder: "Uber die Eigenschaft der Gammafunction
keiner algebraischen Differentialgleichung zu gengen," Math.
Annalen, 28 (1887), 1-13.
46 Picard: Jour. de l'Ecole Polytech., 1890.
47 Cf. D. Hilbert: "ber das Dirichlet'sche
Princip," Jahresber. d. Deutschen Math.-Vereinigung,
8 (1900), 184-188.
48 L. Schlesinger: Handbuch der Theorie der linearen
Differentialgleichungen, vol. 2, part 2, No. 366.
49 H. Poincar: "Sur un thorme de la thorie
gnrale des fonctions," BuII. de la Soc. Math. de France,
11 (1883),112-125.
50 Text-books: Moigno and Lindelf, Leons du
calcul des variations, Mallet-Bachelier, Paris, 1861, and A.
Kneser, Lehrbuch der Variations-rechnung, Vieweg, Braunschweig,
1900.
51 As an indication of the contents of this work,
it may here be noted that for the simplest problems Kneser derives
sufficient conditions of the extreme even for the case that one
limit of integration is variable, and employs the envelope of a
family of curves satisfying the differential equations of the problem
to prove the necessity of Jacobi's conditions of the extreme. Moreover,
it should be noticed that Kneser applies Weierstrass's theory also
to the inquiry for the extreme of such quantities as are defined
by differential equations.
52 Cf. Kneser's above-mentioned textbook, 14,
16, 19 and 20.
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