This movement began as an extension of a
German nationalistic movement in the physics community which went back to the
start of World War I with Austria's
declaration of war on 28 July 1914. On 25 August 1914, during the German
Rape of Belgium, German troops used petrol to set fire to the library of the
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. The burning of the library led to a protest note which was signed by eight distinguished British scientists, namely
William Bragg,
William Crookes,
Alexander Fleming,
Horace Lamb,
Oliver Lodge,
William Ramsay,
Lord Rayleigh, and
J. J. Thomson. In 1915, this led to a counter-reaction in the form of an "appeal" formulated by
Wilhelm Wien and addressed to German physicists and scientific publishers, which was signed by sixteen German physicists, including
Arnold Sommerfeld and
Johannes Stark. They claimed that German character had been misinterpreted and that attempts made over many years to reach an understanding between the two countries had obviously failed. Therefore, they opposed the use of the English language by German scientific authors, editors of books, and translators. A number of German
physicists, including
Max Planck and the especially passionate Philipp Lenard, a scientific rival of J. J. Thomson, had then
signed further "declarations", so that gradually a "war of the minds" broke out. On the German side it was suggested to avoid an unnecessary use of English language in scientific texts (concerning, e.g., the renaming of German-discovered phenomena with perceived English-derived names, such as "
X-ray" instead of "
Röntgen ray"). It was stressed, however, that this measure should not be misunderstood as a rejection of British scientific thought, ideas and stimulations. After the war, the perceived affronts of the
Treaty of Versailles kept some of these nationalistic feelings running high, especially in Lenard, who had already complained about England in a small pamphlet at the beginning of the war. When, on 26 January 1920, the former naval cadet Oltwig von Hirschfeld tried to assassinate German Finance minister
Matthias Erzberger, Lenard sent Hirschfeld a telegram of congratulation. After the 1922 assassination of politician
Walther Rathenau, the government ordered flags flown at half mast on the day of his funeral, but Lenard ignored the order at his institute in
Heidelberg. Socialist students organized a demonstration against Lenard, who was taken into protective custody by state prosecutor Hugo Marx. During the early years of the twentieth century,
Albert Einstein's
theory of relativity caused bitter controversy within the worldwide physics community. There were many physicists, especially the "old guard", who were suspicious of the intuitive meanings of Einstein's theories, including Philipp Lenard, one of the authors of the Deutche Physik volumes. While the response to Einstein was based partly on his concepts being a radical break from earlier theories, there was also an anti-Jewish element to some of the criticism. The leading theoretician of the
Deutsche Physik type of movement was
Rudolf Tomaschek, who had re-edited the famous physics textbook ''Grimsehl's Lehrbuch der Physik''. In that book, which consists of several volumes, the
Lorentz transformation was accepted, as well as the
old quantum theory. However, Einstein's interpretation of the Lorentz transformation was not mentioned, and Einstein's name was completely ignored. Many
classical physicists resented Einstein's dismissal of the notion of a
luminiferous aether, which had been a mainstay of their work for the majority of their productive lives. They were not convinced by the
empirical evidence for relativity. They believed that the measurements of the
perihelion of
Mercury and the null result of the
Michelson–Morley experiment might be explained in other ways, and the results of the
Eddington eclipse experiment were experimentally problematic enough to be dismissed as meaningless by the more devoted doubters. Many of them were very distinguished experimental physicists, and Lenard was himself a
Nobel laureate in Physics. ==Under the Third Reich==