Mathematicians Fleeing from Nazi Germany: Individual Fates and Global ImpactPrinceton University Press, 6 ביולי 2009 - 504 עמודים The emigration of mathematicians from Europe during the Nazi era signaled an irrevocable and important historical shift for the international mathematics world. Mathematicians Fleeing from Nazi Germany is the first thoroughly documented account of this exodus. In this greatly expanded translation of the 1998 German edition, Reinhard Siegmund-Schultze describes the flight of more than 140 mathematicians, their reasons for leaving, the political and economic issues involved, the reception of these emigrants by various countries, and the emigrants' continuing contributions to mathematics. The influx of these brilliant thinkers to other nations profoundly reconfigured the mathematics world and vaulted the United States into a new leadership role in mathematics research. |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-5 מתוך 89
... Jews in America 8.S.3.4. The anti-Semitism of George David Birkhoff 8.S.3.5. Declining academic anti-Semitism in the USA after 1945 CHAPTER 9 Acculturation, Political Adaptation, and the American Entrance into the War 9.1. General ...
... Jews in the Republic of Weimar and on the first years of the university in Jerusalem, has to be treated with particular care because it contains a number of inadvertent inaccuracies. Reid's biography (1976) of Courant remains valuable ...
... Jewish emigrants as refugees from the Nazis is supported by the fact that non-Jewish early emigrants, such as Eberhard Hopf and Wilhelm Maier, returned to Hitler's Germany after 1933 and profited partly from the dismissals of their Jewish ...
... Jews among them, is still in need of investigation.19 The teachers who did emigrate—of which several figure prominently in a review by American educator Arnold Dresden (1942)—are included in the main list of emigrants as far as they are ...
... Jewish woman accompanying her Jewish spouse into emigration. The two went on from Great Britain to Australia after the war. ematicians themselves trained in mathematics of whose lives during emigration relatively little is known. The ...
תוכן
1 | |
13 | |
30 | |
Chapter 4 Pretexts Forms and the Extent of Emigration and Persecution | 59 |
Chapter 5 Obstacles to Emigration out of Germany after 1933 Failed Escape and Death | 90 |
Chapter 6 Alternative NonAmerican Host Countries | 102 |
Chapter 7 Diminishing Ties with Germany and SelfImage of the Refugees | 149 |
Help and Xenophobia | 186 |
Appendix 34 Report by Artur Rosenthal Heidelberg from June 1935 on the Boycott of His and Heinrich Liebmanns Mathematical Courses | 376 |
Appendix 35 Max PinlLater the Author of Pioneering Reports 196972 on Mathematical Refugeesin a Letter to Hermann Weyl on the Situation in Cz... | 378 |
Appendix 41 A Letter by Emmy Noether of January 1935 to the Emergency Committee in New York Regarding Her Scientific and Political Interests... | 380 |
Appendix 42 Richard Courants Resignation from the German Mathematicians Association DMV in 1935 | 381 |
Appendix 43 Von Mises in His Diary about His Second Emigration from Turkey to the USA in 1939 | 383 |
Appendix 44 Hermann Weyl to Harlow Shapley on June 5 1943 Concerning the Problems of the Immigrant from Göttingen Felix Bernstein | 388 |
Appendix 51 Richard Courant in October 1945 to the American Authorities Who Were Responsible for German Scientific Reparation | 390 |
Appendix 52 Max Dehns Refusal to Rejoin the German Mathematicians Association DMV in 1948 | 393 |
Chapter 9 Acculturation Political Adaptation and the American Entrance into the War | 230 |
Chapter 10 The Impact of Immigration on American Mathematics | 267 |
The Postwar Relationship of German and American Mathematicians | 319 |
Appendix 1 Lists of Emigrated after 1933 Murdered and Otherwise Persecuted GermanSpeaking Mathematicians as of 2008 | 341 |
Appendix 2 Excerpt from a Letter by George David Birkhoff from Paris 1928 to His ColleagueMathematicians at Harvard Concerning the Possibility... | 366 |
Appendix 31 Report Compiled by Harald Bohr Together with Different German Friends in May 1933 Concerning the Present Conditions in German ... | 368 |
Appendix 32 Translation of a Letter from Professor Karl Löwner of the University of Prague to Professor Louis L Silverman Dartmouth College Dat... | 372 |
Appendix 33 Richard von Misess Position toward the Events of Our Time in November 1933 | 374 |
Appendix 6 Memoirs for My Children 19331988 by Peter Thullen | 394 |
Archives Unprinted Sources and Their Abbreviations | 415 |
References | 421 |
Photographs Index and Credits | 445 |
Subject Index | 449 |
Name Index | 461 |