Abstract
Newton's rotating bucket pours cold water on the naive relationalist by vividly illustrating how certain rotational effects, particularly those due to non-zero angular momentum, can depend on more than just relations between material bodies. Because of such effects, rotation has played a central role in the absolute-relational debate and poses a particularly difficult challenge to the relationalist. In this paper, we provide a qualified response to this challenge that significantly weakens the absolutist position. We present a theory that, contrary to orthodoxy, can account for all rotational effects without introducing, as the absolutist does, a fixed standard of rotation. Instead, our theory posits a universal SO(3) charge that plays the role of angular momentum and couples to inter-particle relations via terms commonly seen in standard gauge theories such as electromagnetism and the Standard Model of particle physics. Our theory makes use of an enriched form of relationalism: it adds an SO(3) structure to the traditional relational description. Our construction is made possible by the modern tools of gauge theory, which reveal a simple relational law describing rotational effects. In this way, we can save the phenomena of Newtonian mechanics using conserved charges and relationalism. In a second paper, we will further explore the ontological and explanatory implications of the theory developed here.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 138-155 |
Number of pages | 18 |
Journal | Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics |
Volume | 88 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Aug-2021 |
Keywords
- physics.hist-ph