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"On the History of Unified Field Theories. Part II. (ca. 1930 – ca. 1965)"
Hubert F. M. Goenner 
Abstract
1 Introduction
2 Mathematical Preliminaries
3 Interlude: Meanderings – UFT in the late 1930s and the 1940s
4 Unified Field Theory and Quantum Mechanics
5 Born–Infeld Theory
6 Affine Geometry: Schrödinger as an Ardent Player
7 Mixed Geometry: Einstein’s New Attempt
8 Schrödinger II: Arbitrary Affine Connection
9 Einstein II: From 1948 on
10 Einstein–Schrödinger Theory in Paris
11 Higher-Dimensional Theories Generalizing Kaluza’s
12 Further Contributions from the United States
13 Research in other English Speaking Countries
14 Additional Contributions from Japan
15 Research in Italy
16 The Move Away from Einstein–Schrödinger Theory and UFT
17 Alternative Geometries
18 Mutual Influence and Interaction of Research Groups
19 On the Conceptual and Methodic Structure of Unified Field Theory
20 Concluding Comment
Acknowledgements
References
Footnotes
Biographies
André Lichnerowicz (1915 – 1998). He received his doctorate with Georges Darmois on general relativity in 1939. First maître de conférences at the University of Strasbourg (transfered to Clermont-Ferrand during the German occupation), then in Paris; since 1949 professor at the faculty of science of the university of Paris. From 1952 until retirement in 1986 he held a chair for mathematical physics at the Collège de France in Paris. Member of the French Academy of Sciences since 1963. 1966 – 1973 president of Ministerial Commission on the Teaching of Mathematics.