Lorentz, Poincare, Einstein, and the Genesis of the Theory of Special Relativity

Abstract

.This article reexamines the genesis of special relativity by situating the contributions of Lorentz, Poincare, and Einstein within the scientific, documentary, and editorial context of the years 1895--1913. It emphasizes the rapid circulation of Lorentz 1904 work, in particular through German-speaking channels such as the Beiblatter zu den Annalen der Physik, and reassesses the significance of Richard Gans 1905 review as a concise access point to Lorentz results. The article also discusses Poincaré role in formulating the principle of relativity, interpreting local time, establishing the group property of the Lorentz transformations, and developing an invariant formulation of electrodynamics. Against this background, Einstein 1905 paper appears not as an isolated creation, but as a powerful reformulation of problems already posed by Maxwellian electrodynamics and by the failure to detect motion through the ether. The article finally examines the subsequent construction of the Lorentz--Einstein--Minkowski canon and the relative exclusion of Poincare from that narrative. Its central claim is that special relativity should be understood as the crystallization of a broader electrodynamic transformation of physics, rather than as a sudden break detached from its immediate scientific context.

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