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Erhard Schmidt

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Fields
  
Mathematics

Parents
  
Alexander Schmidt

Doctoral advisor
  
David Hilbert

Name
  
Erhard Schmidt

Grandparents
  
Carol Schmidt

Role
  
Mathematician


Erhard Schmidt httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
13 January 1876 Tartu, Governorate of Livonia (now Estonia) (
1876-01-13
)

Alma mater
  
Georg-August University of Gottingen

Thesis
  
Entwickelung willkurlicher Funktionen nach Systemen vorgeschriebener (1905)

Doctoral students
  
Salomon Bochner Alfred Brauer Richard Brauer Lothar Collatz Alexander Dinghas Michael Golomb Guido Hoheisel Eberhard Hopf Heinz Hopf Martin Kneser Wilhelm Specht

Died
  
December 6, 1959, Berlin, Germany

Spouse
  
Berta von Bergmann (m. 1909–1916)

Similar People
  
David Hilbert, Ludwig Bieberbach, Heinz Hopf, Alfred Brauer, Richard Brauer

Education
  
University of Gottingen

Erhard Schmidt (13 January 1876 – 6 December 1959) was a Baltic German mathematician whose work significantly influenced the direction of mathematics in the twentieth century. Schmidt was born in Tartu (German: Dorpat), in the Governorate of Livonia (now Estonia).

Contents

Erhard Schmidt Erhard Schmidt

Mathematics

His advisor was David Hilbert and he was awarded his doctorate from Georg-August University of Göttingen in 1905. His doctoral dissertation was entitled Entwickelung willkürlicher Functionen nach Systemen vorgeschriebener and was a work on integral equations. Together with David Hilbert he made important contributions to functional analysis. Ernst Zermelo credited conversations with Schmidt for the idea and method for his classic 1904 proof of the Well-ordering theorem from an "Axiom of choice", which has become an integral part of modern set theory.

After the war, in 1948, Schmidt founded and became the first editor-in-chief of the journal Mathematische Nachrichten.

National Socialism

During World War II Schmidt held positions of authority at the University of Berlin and had to carry out various Nazi resolutions against the Jews—a job that he apparently did not do well, since he was criticized at one point for not understanding the "Jewish question." At the celebration of Schmidt's 75th birthday in 1951 a prominent Jewish mathematician, Hans Freudenthal, who had survived the Nazi years, spoke of the difficulties that Schmidt faced during that period without criticism. He was, however, a conservative and a nationalist, and defended Hitler after Kristallnacht, telling Issai Schur that "Suppose we had to fight a war to rearm Germany, unite with Austria, liberate the Saar and the German part of Czechoslovakia. Such a war would have cost us half a million young men. But everybody would have admired our victorious leader. Now, Hitler has sacrificed half a million Jews and has achieved great things for Germany. I hope some day you will be recompensed but I am still grateful to Hitler".

References

Erhard Schmidt Wikipedia