The History of Mathematics: A Brief Course

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98 4. WOMEN MATHEMATICIANS

however, finding work at a university, was formidable. Emmy Noether spent many

years working without salary at the Mathematical Institute in Erlangen. This po-

sition enabled her to look after her father, who had been frail since he contracted

polio at the age of 14. It also allowed her to continue working on mathematical

ideas. For nearly two decades she corresponded with Ernst Fischer (1875-1954,

Gordan's successor in Erlangen), who is best remembered for having discovered

the Riesz-Fischer theorem independently of F. Riesz (1880-1956). By staying in

touch with the mathematical community and giving lectures on her discoveries,

she kept her name before certain influential mathematicians, namely David Hilbert

(1862-1943) and Felix Klein,^16 and in 1915 she was invited to work as a Privat-

dozent in Gottingen. (This was the same rank originally offered to Kovalevskaya

at Stockholm in 1883.) Over the next four years Klein and Hilbert used all their

influence to get her a regular appointment at Gottingen; during part of that time

she lectured for Hilbert in mathematical physics. That work led her to a theorem

in general relativity that was highly praised by both Hilbert and Einstein. Despite

this brilliant work, however, she was not allowed to pass the Habituation needed to

acquire a professorship. Only after the German defeat in World War I, which was

followed by the abdication of the Kaiser and a general spirit of reform in Germany,

was she allowed to "habilitate." Between Sof'ya Kovalevskaya and Emmy Noether

there was a curious kind of symmetry: Kovalevskaya was probably aided in her ef-

forts to become a student in Berlin because many of the students were away at war

at the time. Noether was aided in her efforts to become a professor by an influx of

returning war veterans. She began lecturing in courses offered under the name Dr.

Emmy Noether (without any mention of Hilbert) in the fall of 1919. Through the

efforts of Richard Courant (1888-1972) she was eventually granted a small salary

for her lectures.

In the 1920s she moved into the area of abstract algebra, and it is in this area

that mathematicians know her work best. Noctherian rings became a basic area

of study after her work, which became part of a standard textbook by her student

Bartel Leendert van der Waerden (1903 1996). He later described her influence on

this work (1975, p. 32):

When I came to Gottingen in 1924, a new world opened up be-

fore me. I learned from Emmy Noether that the tools by which

my questions could be handled had already been developed by

Dedekind and Weber, by Hilbert, Lasker, and Macaulay, by Steinitz

and by Emmy Noether herself.

Of all the women we have discussed Emmy Noether was unquestionably the

most talented mathematically. Her work, both in quantity and quality, places her

in the elite of twentieth-century mathematicians, and it was recognized as such

during her lifetime. She became an editor of Mathematische Annalen, one of the

two or three most prestigious journals in the world. She was invited to speak at

the International Congress of Mathematicians in Bologna in 1928 and in Zurich

in 1932, when she shared with Emil Artin (1898-1962) a prestigious prize for the

advancement of mathematical knowledge. This recognition was clear and simple

(^16) Klein wrote to Hilbert, "You know that FVaulein Noether is continually advising me in my
projects and that it is really through her that I have become competent in the subject." (Dick,
1981, p. 31)

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