Classical Mechanics Is Lagrangian; It Is Not Hamiltonian
From MaRDI portal
(Redirected from Publication:5265969)
Recommendations
- Classical mechanics. Hamiltonian and Lagrangian formalism
- Classical mechanics. Hamiltonian and Lagrangian formalism.
- Hamiltonian system and classical mechanics
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1228464
- Classical mechanics - on the deduction of Lagrange's equations
- Lagrangian and Hamiltonian dynamics
- Note on classical Hamiltonian theory
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 2123121
- Classical mechanics
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3461504
Cited in
(22)- On the structure of classical mechanics
- Change in Hamiltonian general relativity from the lack of a time-like Killing vector field
- Quine's conjecture on many-sorted logic
- A new role for mathematics in empirical sciences
- Structure and equivalence
- What do symmetries tell us about structure?
- Glymour and Quine on theoretical equivalence
- Hamiltonian privilege
- On Putnam's proof of the impossibility of a nominalistic physics
- An invitation to conventionalism: a philosophy for modern (space-)times
- Mutual translatability, equivalence, and the structure of theories
- On Einstein algebras and relativistic spacetimes
- Deformation quantization as an appropriate guide to ontic structure
- Hamiltonian mechanics is conservation of information entropy
- Spacetime structure
- The evolutionary versus the all-at-once picture of spacetime
- How to count structure
- Theoretical equivalence and duality
- Theoretical equivalence in classical mechanics and its relationship to duality
- Morita equivalence
- Why not categorical equivalence?
- Fiber bundles, Yang-Mills theory, and general relativity
This page was built for publication: Classical Mechanics Is Lagrangian; It Is Not Hamiltonian
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q5265969)