82. Emmy Amalie Noether born on March 23, 1882 in Erlangen, Bavaria, in Germany and she died on April 14,1935 in Bryn Mavr, Pennsylvania, in the USA Her father, max noether, was a http://warrensburg.k12.mo.us/math/emmy/ali.html |
Emmy Amalie Noether By: Ali G. Amalie Emmy Noether My dance is Mathematics Down, down, down into the darkness of the grave. Gently they go, the beautiful, the tender, the brave. I know. But I do not approve. And I am not resigned. Dinge with Veisee by: Edna St. Vinceat. Millay; offered by: Herman Weyl, in a Memorial Address for Amalie Emmy Noether, on April 26, 1933, at Bryn Maur College. Amalie Emmy Noether was born on March 23, 1882 in Erlangen, Bavaria, in Germany and she died on April 14, 1935 in Bryn Mavr, Pennsylvania, in the U.S.A. Her father, Max Noether, was a distinqueshed mathematician. Her mother, Ida Kauffmann, came from a wealthy cologne family. Emmy was the eldest of four children. Her three younger siblings were boys. Emmy was a mathematician in the first half of the 20th century. Emmy is best known for her contributions to abstract algebra, her study of chain conditions on ideals of rings, groups, and fields. Emmy started out in the subject area of Language and English. Later, she changed her field to Mathematics. Emmy was never permitted to hold a paid position. Emmy taught for no pay, so she could use the universities facilities, for her work. Emmy had an official appointment at Gottingen University, in 1919. Emmy developed the theories of ideals and of non- commutative algebras. After the Nazis dismissed Emmy and all other Jewish professors in 1933, she worked in th U.S., at Bryn Mavr college and she worked at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. | |
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