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The New Era in American Mathematics, 1920–1950

Karen Hunger Parshall

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Naturwissenschaften, Medizin, Informatik, Technik / Geometrie

Beschreibung

A meticulously researched history on the development of American mathematics in the three decades following World War I

As the Roaring Twenties lurched into the Great Depression, to be followed by the scourge of Nazi Germany and World War II, American mathematicians pursued their research, positioned themselves collectively within American science, and rose to global mathematical hegemony. How did they do it? The New Era in American Mathematics, 1920–1950 explores the institutional, financial, social, and political forces that shaped and supported this community in the first half of the twentieth century. In doing so, Karen Hunger Parshall debunks the widely held view that American mathematics only thrived after European émigrés fled to the shores of the United States.

Drawing from extensive archival and primary-source research, Parshall uncovers the key players in American mathematics who worked together to effect change and she looks at their research output over the course of three decades. She highlights the educational, professional, philanthropic, and governmental entities that bolstered progress. And she uncovers the strategies implemented by American mathematicians in their quest for the advancement of knowledge. Throughout, she considers how geopolitical circumstances shifted the course of the discipline.

Examining how the American mathematical community asserted itself on the international stage, The New Era in American Mathematics, 1920–1950 shows the way one nation became the focal point for the field.

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Aftermath of World War II, Number theory, Hyperbolic partial differential equation, American Association of Physics Teachers, Chancellor (education), Mathematical physics, Georg Cantor, Estimation theory, Purdue University, Quaternion algebra, Undergraduate degree, American Mathematical Society, Theoretical physics, Methoden der mathematischen Physik, Theory, Spectral theorem, Analytic continuation, American Institute of Physics, Riemann hypothesis, Whitney embedding theorem, American Journal of Mathematics, Physicist, Mathematical Association of America, Nucleic acid sequence, Statistician, Characterization (mathematics), Introduction to general relativity, Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, Connecticut College, Patrician (ancient Rome), Word problem (mathematics education), Minkowski space, New Century, Edward R. Murrow, Euclidean space, Joint Policy Board for Mathematics, New Math, New York University, University of Notre Dame, Polish Academy of Sciences, Prime number theorem, Mathematics, Riemannian geometry, Projection (mathematics), London Mathematical Society, John von Neumann, Annals of Mathematical Statistics, Annals of Mathematics, Duke Mathematical Journal, National Science Board, The Herald-Sun (Durham, North Carolina), New York University Press, Applied mathematics, New Direction (think tank), Division algebra, European Mathematical Society, Mathematician, New York Public Library, Probability and statistics, American Mathematical Monthly, Ideal (ring theory), Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, American Statistical Association, National Defense Research Committee, Hilbert's fifth problem, Washington University in St. Louis, Complex number, Acta Arithmetica, Fundamenta Mathematicae, Richard Dedekind