Erhard Scholz


Erhard Scholz is a German historian of mathematics with interests in the history of mathematics in the 19th and 20th centuries, historical perspective on the philosophy of mathematics and science, and Hermann Weyl's geometrical methods applied to gravitational theory.

Education and career

Scholz studied mathematics at the University of Bonn and the University of Warwick from 1968 to 1975 with Diplom from the University of Bonn in 1975. In 1979 he completed his doctorate at the University of Bonn with thesis Entwicklung des Mannigfaltigkeitsbegriffs von Riemann bis Poincaré under the supervision of Egbert Brieskorn and Henk J. M. Bos. In 1986 Scholtz habilitated at the University of Wuppertal. There he became in 1989 an associate professor of the history of mathematics and retired in 2012. He also works at the University of Wuppertal's Interdisziplinären Zentrum für Wissenschafts- und Technikforschung, which he co-founded in 2004. In 1993 he was a visiting professor at the Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte at the University of Göttingen.
Scholz's research deals with the emergence of the manifold concept developed by Riemann, Poincaré and others, as well as the historical relations of mathematics to its applications in the 19th century. Scholz has investigated Karl Culmann's graphic statics, the determination of the crystallographic space group by Evgraf Fedorov, the applied mathematics of Hermann Grassmann, and the relation of Gauss's ideas on non-Euclidean geometry to his geodetic work. Continuing these investigations into the beginnings of group theory and concept of a mathematical manifold, Scholz has dealt intensively with Hermann Weyl's work in connection with general relativity theory, cosmology, gauge theory, and quantum mechanics and, especially, Weyl metrics in cosmology. Scholz wrote an article on Oswald Teichmüller for the Dictionary of Scientific Biography and an article, with Norbert Schappacher, in the Jahresberich of the Deutsche Mathematiker Vereinigung. Scholz also pursued connections between the history of mathematics and philosophy, such as the historical and philosophical relations of Riemann's work to that of Johann Friedrich Herbart, of 19th-century crystallography to the work of Schelling, and of Hermann Weyl's philosophy of mathematics to the work of Leibniz.
Scholz was an invited speaker of the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1994 in Zürich. He is a co-editor, with Friedrich Hirzebruch, Reinhold Remmert, Walter Purkert, and Egbert Brieskorn, of the collected works of Felix Hausdorff.

Selected publications