Rolin-Louis Wavre


Quick Info

Born
25 March 1896
Neuchâtel, Switzerland
Died
9 December 1949
Geneva, Switzerland

Summary
Rolin Wavre was a Swiss mathematician who worked on logic and the philosophy of mathematics as well as on geology and astronomy.

Biography

Rolin Wavre was the son of William Wavre (1851-1909) and Marie Jeanjaquet (1855-1949). William Wavre was born in Neuchâtel on 17 June 1851, the seventh of his parents' eleven children, and after attending College and the Academy in his hometown, he studied philology and archaeology at the universities of Bonn, Leipzig and Strasbourg. Returning to Neuchâtel, he was appointed as a master in the Latin College in 1878. In addition he was soon also a professor of archaeology at the Neuchâtel Academy and curator of the Archaeological Museum. On Tuesday 15 October 1878 he married Marie Jeanjaquet and they had eight children: Madeleine Wavre (1880-1972), Claude Wavre (1880-1891), Robert Blaise Alphonse Wavre (1882-1967) who became an engineer, Anne Wavre (1883-1963), Philippe Wavre (1884-1953), Frédéric André Wavre (1886-1963) who became a notary, Hélène Elisa Wavre (1888-1967), and Rolin Wavre (1896-1949), the subject of this biography. We note from this data that Rolin's eldest sibling was 16 years old when he was born and the youngest of his siblings was 8 years old.

William Wavre was involved with the archaeological dig of La Tène, which lies on Lake Neuchâtel, where the many finds appear to be associated with an army defeated around 210 B.C. The 'Commission des fouilles de La Tène' was created and William Wavre directed excavations at La Tène from 1907 until his death two years later.

Rolin Wavre studied at the Gymnasium in Neuchâtel where he was enthusiastic for mathematics and science, topics in which he excelled. After graduating, he studied at the University of Neuchâtel where he was taught by Arnold Reymond (1874-1958). Reymond was a philosopher who had been awarded a doctorate from the University of Geneva in 1908 for his thesis Logique et mathématiques: essai historique et critique sur le nombre infini . He taught at the University of Neuchâtel from 1912 to 1925. Wavre spoke of his gratitude to Reymond:-
His books make me feel, not without some emotion, the privilege I had to be his pupil.
Leaving the University of Neuchâtel in 1916 he went to Paris and entered the Sorbonne studying both there and at the Collège de France. He participated in Jacques Hadamard's seminar and, in addition to his mathematical studies, he attended philosophy lectures, particularly those by the famous Léon Brunschvicg (1869-1944). Brunschvicg had been appointed as professor of philosophy at the Sorbonne in 1909. We should note that one of his interests was the philosophy of mathematics, and his study of the work of Frege and Russell made their work known to French philosophers. In 1917 Gustave Juvet (1896-1936), a mathematician and philosopher from Neuchâtel who knew Wavre well, arrived in Paris to study at the Sorbonne. Wavre had already spent a year in Paris and introduced Juvet into Parisian scientific circles. Wavre graduated in 1918 with a diploma of licencié ès sciences.

After graduating from Paris, Wavre returned to Switzerland where he undertook research for his doctorate at the University of Geneva. He began publishing papers: Sur les développements d'une fonction analytique en série de polynômes (1920), Sur l'équation fonctionnelle f[Δ1(t)]=f[Δ2(t)]f[\Delta _{1}(t)] = f[\Delta _{2}(t)] (1920), Un système d'équations à une infinité d'inconnues (1920), Sur les développements de Mittag-Leffler (1920), Sur l'équation de Fredholm et l'intégrale de Cauchy (1920), and Sur une équation de Fredholm dans le domaine complexe et son application à la théorie des systèmes d'équations linéaires à une infinité d'inconnues (1921). The paper Un système d'équations à une infinité d'inconnues was presented to the International Congress of Mathematicians held in Strasbourg from 22 September to 30 September 1920 and published in the Proceedings of the Congress.

Georges Tiercy writes in [3]:-
[I] got to know Rolin Wavre at the general meeting of the Swiss Society of Natural Sciences, held in Neuchâtel in the summer of 1921; the young graduate of Paris presented before the mathematics section a communication entitled "A propos du problème de la médiane à une courbe fermée plane" , which provoked an animated debate; this was proof that the young scientist from Neuchâtel had the makings of a great mathematician. The events which followed showed this to be the case.
Wavre was awarded his doctorate in 1921 by the University of Geneva for his 40-page thesis Sur quelques propriétés des suites de fonctions continues réelles et l'équation fonctionnelle f[\Delta _{1}(t)] = f[\Delta _{2}(t)] . Following this, he was appointed as a docent at the University of Geneva in 1921. About this time the professor of mathematics at the University of Geneva, Charles Cailler, had to retire through ill health. This created a difficult period for the Faculty of Sciences which worsened in January 1922 when Cailler died. Wavre was appointed as an extraordinary professor of differential and integral calculus and rational mechanics on 18 July 1922. He delivered his inaugural lecture L'oeuvre scientifique de Charles Cailler . Here is a quote from the lecture [6]:-
For those who are not mathematicians or beginners, the theorems, the functions of which I have just spoken, are perhaps only names. The layman sees only the game of an intelligence that likes to have fun with itself. The beginner only feels a magic charm and bows to the mysterious mystery of all these fictions. But soon, for those with a mathematical mind, these fictions take shape, they form a whole whose contemplation is the source of the purest intellectual enjoyments.
Henri Reverdin recalls a meeting with Wavre in June 1922 [2]:-
At the seventeenth of our annual meetings, due to a very happy initiative of Jean-Jacques Gourd, we had just founded the French-speaking society of philosophy. It was 14 June 1923. We were sitting in Rolle château in the courtroom. Rolin Wavre was sitting with his friends Jean de la Harpe, Jean Piaget and Leon Bopp near the wall facing the lake. It was the first time that this tall Neuchâtelois appeared among us, whose face with its beautiful features was ennobled by a profound and magnificent look. Like other "young people", he urged the fledgling society to create "sections" in our three academic centres, in Geneva, Lausanne and Neuchâtel, where philosophers, theologians, humanists and scientists would work together throughout the semesters.
Let us note that his friend Jean de la Harpe (1892-1947) was a philosopher who, like Wavre, had been taught by Arnold Reymond and Léon Brunschvicg. Jean Piaget (1896-1980) was a psychologist who had, like Wavre, been born in Neuchâtel. He had been appointed as director of the Rousseau Institute in Geneva in 1921. Leon Bopp (1896-1977) was a novelist and philosopher born at La-Chaux-de-Fonds, less than 20 km from Neuchâtel. He was educated at the University of Geneva and at the Sorbonne.

Wavre became an ordinary professor of mathematics at the University of Geneva on 11 July 1934.

In 1924 he published the 36-page article Y a-t-il une crise des mathématiques? A propos de la notion d'existence et d'une application suspecte du principe du tiers exclu . It is not difficult to see how the questions that Wavre considered in this paper came to interest him since he had been taught by Arnold Reymond and Léon Brunschvicg, two outstanding teachers of the philosophy of mathematics. A summarised translation into English of this article by Alice Ambrose was published in the American Mathematical Monthly in 1934 with the title Is There A Crisis in Mathematics? With reference to the notion of existence and a doubtful application of the law of the excluded middle [5]. We give a version at THIS LINK.

From the evidence we have from Wavre's papers, for which we gave titles above, and this work on the foundations of mathematics we might suppose that he is a pure mathematician with broad interests. His next two papers, however, show that he had interests in geology. These papers are Sur la force qui tendrait à rapprocher un continent de l'équateur (1925) and Sur le mouvement de deux sphères concentriques à propos d'une hypothèse géologique (1925). In his paper on continental drift, Wavre shows that a hypothesis put forward by Alfred Wegener that the drift is caused by the force created by the Earth's rotation cannot be correct since the force from the Earth's rotation is extremely weak, and certainly not sufficient to bring about the formation of great mountain ranges. Wavre was certainly friendly with another early believer in continental drift, namely Émile Argand (1879-1940), a Swiss geologist who founded the Geological Institute in Neuchâtel.

There were other areas to which Wavre contributed major works, namely astronomy and mathematical physics. In astronomy he published numerous articles beginning in 1926 with papers such as Sur les mouvements internes des planètes and Sur les mouvements internes et la stratification des corps célestes . He combined his many papers on geology and astronomy in the book Figures planetaires et geodesie (1932). The importance of this work can be seen immediately from the Preface to the work written by Jacques Hadamard. Willi Rinow writes in the review Zbl 0005.31602:-
In this book, the author gives a comprehensive and detailed account of his investigations into the shape of the celestial bodies published in numerous smaller and larger works. The method of the author consists in the development of the potential according to spherical functions. ... It is not the author's ambition to write an all-inclusive textbook. Rather, this book represents a valuable addition to existing textbooks. Content overlaps with the well-known works on the theory of equilibrium figures hardly take place.
In mathematical physics, Wave published works on fluids such as Sur l'équilibre relatif d'une masse fluide (1926) and Quelques propriétés des figures d'équilibre d'une masse fluide hétérogène (1929). These were, however, closely connected to his work in astronomy for he considered rapidly rotating stars. Here he proved a fundamental theorem which today is known as the Poincaré-Wavre theorem. Wavre begins Planetary Figures and Poincaré Problem with the following:-
We would like to draw the attention of mathematicians to a problem that is a little neglected today, because it relates to Newton's field, that of the equilibrium figures of a heterogeneous fluid mass. It retains all its physical interest since, in the case of the Earth, Einstein's corrections would be very weak, and it keeps above all its captivating aspect from a mathematical point of view. We present here, in a very concise form, a method which satisfies a desideratum formulated by Tisserand, which provides the common thread for classifying the classical results and obtaining others. In particular, this process removes the well-known disagreement reported by Poincaré between geodesy and the theory of procession. The illustrious scientist had only criticized the first approximation. The second reduces the gap considerably.
Wavre was a plenary speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians held in Zurich from 5 September to 12 September 1932. His lecture was entitled L'aspect analytique du problème des figures planétaires . Discussing Wavre's work on mathematical physics, Georges Tiercy writes in [3]:-
It must be noted that in these fields of physics, the researcher is nowadays less and less free in his activities, or rather in his ideas; he must or should take into account more and more details; if he neglects some of them, perhaps because he knows them badly, the model he gives of natural phenomena is not satisfactory. I think Rolin Wavre was measuring this difficulty; we have often discussed it together. It was fitting that, in every application of mathematics to natural facts, we must confine ourselves to the relative; no absolute; the mathematician will often have to admit reasons of good sense or intuition; and, in any case, he does not have the right, in order to facilitate his task, to neglect part of the data, even if these are apparently of minimal numerical importance. Should we see in these remarks the reason for the reservation of Wavre with regard to the problems of relativity?
Georges Tiercy also writes about Wavre's teaching in [3]:-
Rolin Wavre combined the qualities of the teacher with those of the scientist; any problem analysed by him became simple, at least in appearance. He sought to present to his students the classical results in an elegant form, and if possible often in a new way. And there was humour in his presentations. For those of his students who themselves possessed qualities of researchers, what a devoted advisor he was and particularly for students whose theses he directed! In connection with his teaching, we must mention the organization which he chaired for several years, the "Colloques internationaux de mathématiques" at Geneva, which has met with undeniable success, and which would be sufficient by itself to permanently sustain his memory.
Reverdin writes in [2] about these Colloquia:-
In 1933 he had the good idea to organize the "Colloques internationaux de mathématiques" at Geneva; he invited the most famous specialists to come together to discuss the problems of analysis, mechanics, topology, and probability theory. What a joy for us to see him then surrounded by his peers, and to feel that by his distinction, his charm, his driving ardour, he animated these meetings. It was for him, after months of steps and preparation, beautiful days of intellectual and moral fullness.
During the years of World War II he did military service but discovered that it was too tiring and that he had serious health problems with a weak heart. Reverdin writes in [2] that it was a:-
... sudden, agonizing, terrible revelation ... How would he succeed in curbing his ardour, he, the intrepid climber and the enthusiastic skier, the hard worker, the university professor magnificently devoted to all his duties, the great independent who suddenly started driving his car and escaped into the beautiful countryside with vast horizons? What sacrifices did he have to accept, one after the other. He did it with courage, discreetly; but his eyes sometimes expressed what his lips wanted to keep quiet! When he had given up evening outings, we did not see him at meetings of our Geneva section, and last year he did not come to the meeting in Rolle château.
In 1948 Wavre, however published the book L'imagination du réel. L'invention et la découverte dans la science des nombres . He dedicated the book to his friend Jean de la Harpe who had died in the previous year. Reverdin writes in [2]:-
With what clarity he presents the most difficult theories, with what mastery he explains, compares and appreciates them! Admirable teacher for his students, he likes to enlighten the cultured public by putting at his service all the resources of his mind, his gifts as a writer, his polemical malice (which is sometimes a little more than malicious) and his kindness; by courtesy, he spares his readers any effort that is not indispensable; exposing the most bare bones of the concepts in any "representation", he shows how to recall again concrete data; he invents comparisons of all kinds, to make us smile - or laugh - to charm us, suddenly surprise us, even move us, and always to help us understand.
His health, however, made it impossible for him to continue his academic activities [2]:-
In September 1949, when the Fourth Congress of French-speaking Philosophical Societies gathered in Neuchâtel, his own city, so many philosophers and scholars who, in Switzerland, France, Belgium, loved to surround him and praise him, he was at Chaumont. Would he come down to join us? He could not. But we knew how much he had regretted his absence. For two more months, the illness worsened: he was still working. One winter's evening, one of his brothers, our colleague M Philippe Wavre, who had come hastily to Geneva, told me that his condition had suddenly become worse; the next morning, 9 December 1949, we lost him.


References (show)

  1. W Cart, In memoriam: Rolin Wavre, Bulletin de l'Association Pro Aventico 10 (1910), 2-6.
  2. H Reverdin, In memoriam: Rolin Wavre (1896-1949), Revue de théologie et de philosophie 38 (1950), 294-300.
  3. G Tiercy, Rolin Wavre: 1896-1949: elu membre ordinaire en 1925, président en 1930, Archives des sciences 3 (1950), 65-69.
  4. G Tiercy, Rolin Wavre, Annales des l'Université de Lyon, Section A, Sciences de Mathématiques et Astronomie 13 (1950, 5-6.
  5. R Wavre, Is There A Crisis in Mathematics?, Amer. Math. Monthly 41 (8) (1934), 488-499.
  6. R Wavre, L'oeuvre scientifique de Charles Cailler, Archives sc. physiques (5) 4 (1922), 417-429.

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Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update January 2020