Classical Mechanics Is Lagrangian; It Is Not Hamiltonian
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Publication:5265969
DOI10.1093/BJPS/AXS034zbMATH Open1357.70003OpenAlexW2120229085MaRDI QIDQ5265969FDOQ5265969
Authors: Erik Curiel
Publication date: 29 July 2015
Published in: The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/8625/1/cm-lag-not-ham.pdf
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Cited In (14)
- Change in Hamiltonian general relativity from the lack of a time-like Killing vector field
- Quine's conjecture on many-sorted logic
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- Why Not Categorical Equivalence?
- MORITA EQUIVALENCE
- 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
- Fiber bundles, Yang-Mills theory, and general relativity
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