| The Unparalleled Genius of John von Neumann
 
 - Cantor’s Paradise
 Jørgen Veisdal
 cantorsparadise.com
 
 
 
  
 The von Neumann Essays
 
  
 
 
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 “Most mathematicians prove what they can, von Neumann proves what he wants”It  is indeed supremely difficult to effectively refute the claim that John  von Neumann is likely the most intelligent person who has ever lived.  By the time of his death in 1957 at the modest age of 53, the Hungarian  polymath had not only revolutionized several subfields of mathematics  and physics but also made foundational contributions to pure economics  and statistics and taken key parts in the invention of the atomic bomb,  nuclear energy and digital computing.
 
 Known now as “the last representative of the great mathematicians”,  von Neumann’s genius was legendary even in his own lifetime. The sheer  breadth of stories and anecdotes about his brilliance, from Nobel  Prize-winning physicists to world-class mathematicians abound:
 
 
 ”You  know, Herb, Johnny can do calculations in his head ten times as fast as  I can. And I can do them ten times as fast as you can, so you can see  how impressive Johnny is” — Enrico Fermi (Nobel Prize in Physics, 1938)And  indeed, von Neumann both worked alongside and collaborated with some of  the foremost figures of twentieth century science. He went to high  school with  Eugene Wigner, collaborated with  Hermann Weyl at ETH, attended lectures by  Albert Einstein in Berlin, worked under  David Hilbert at  Göttingen, with  Alan Turing and  Oskar Morgenstern in Princeton, with  Niels Bohr in Copenhagen and was close with both  Richard Feynman and  J. Robert Oppenheimer at Los Alamos.
 “One  had the impression of a perfect instrument whose gears were machined to  mesh accurately to a thousandth of an inch.” — Eugene Wigner (Nobel  Prize in Physics, 1963)
 
 “I have sometimes wondered  whether a brain like von Neumann’s does not indicate a species superior  to that of man” — Hans Bethe (Nobel Prize in Physics, 1967)
 
 
 
 An  émigré to America in 1933, von Neumann’s life was one famously  dedicated to cognitive and creative pursuits, but also the enjoyments of  life. Twice married and wealthy, he loved expensive clothes, hard  liquor, fast cars and dirty jokes, according to his friend  Stanislaw Ulam.  Almost involuntarily, his posthumous biographer Norman Macrae recounts,  people took a liking to von Neumann, even those who disagreed with his  conservative politics (Regis, 1992).
 
 This essay aims to highlight some of the unbelievable feats of “Johnny” von Neumann’s mind. Happy reading!
 
 Early years (1903–1921)Neumann János Lajos (John Louis Neumann in English) was born (or “ arrived”)  on December 28th 1903 in Budapest, Hungary. Born to wealthy  non-observant Jewish bankers, his upbringing can be described as  privileged. His father held a doctorate in law, and he grew up in an  18-room apartment on the top floor above the Kann-Heller offices at  62 Bajcsy-Zsilinszky Street in Budapest (Macrae, 1992).
 
 
  
 John von Neumann at age 7 (1910)Child prodigy“Johnny”  von Neumann was a child prodigy. Even from a young age, there were  strange stories of little John Louis’ abilities: dividing two  eight-digit numbers in his head and conversing in Ancient Greek at age  six (Henderson, 2007), proficient in calculus at age eight (Nasar, 1998)  and reading Emile Borel’s Théorie des Fonctions (“On some points in the theory of functions” ) at age twelve (Leonard, 2010). Reportedly, von Neumann possessed an  eidetic memory,  and so was able to recall complete novels and pages of the phone  directory on command. This enabled him to accumulate an almost  encyclopedic knowledge of what ever he read, such as the history of the  Peloponnesian Wars, the  Trial Joan of Arc and  Byzantine history  (Leonard, 2010). A Princeton professor of the latter topic once stated  that by the time he was in his thirties, Johnny had greater expertise in  Byzantine history than he did (Blair, 1957).
 
 
  
 
  
 Left: John von Neumann at age 11 (1915) with his cousin Katalin Alcsuti. (Photo: Nicholas Vonneumann). Right: The Neumann brothers Miklós (1911–2011), Mihály (1907–1989) and János Lajos (1903–1957)
 
 "One of his remarkable abilities was his power of absolute recall. As far as I could tell, von Neumann was able on once reading a book or article to quote it back verbatim; moreover, he could do it years later without hesitation. He could also translate it at no diminution in speed from its original language into English. On one occasion I tested his ability by asking him to tell me how A Tale of Two Cities started. Whereupon, without any pause, he immediately began to recite the first chapter and continued until asked to stop after about ten or fifteen minutes."Excerpt, The Computer from Pascal to von Neumann by Herman Goldstein (1980)An  unconventional parent, von Neumann’s father Max would reportedly bring  his workaday banking decisions home to the family and ask his children  how they would have reacted to particular investment possibilities and  balance-sheet risks (Macrae, 1992). He was home-schooled until 1914, as  was the custom in Hungary at the time. Starting at the age of 11, he was  enrolled in the German-speaking  Lutheran Gymnasium in Budapest. He would attend the high school until 1921, famously overlapping the high school years of three other “ Martians” of Hungary: 
 
  Leo Szilard (att. 1908–16 at Real Gymnasium), the physicist who conceived of the  nuclear chain reaction and in late 1939 wrote the famous  Einstein-Szilard letter for Franklin D. Roosevelt that resulted in the formation of the Manhattan Project that built the first atomic bomb Eugene Wigner (att. 1913–21 at  Lutheran Gymnasium),  the 1963 Nobel Prize laureate in Physics who worked on the Manhattan  Project, including the theory of the atomic nucleus, elementary  particles and  Wigner’s Theorem in quantum mechanics Edward Teller  (att. 1918–26 at Minta School), the “father of the hydrogen bomb”, an  early member of the Manhattan Project and contributor to nuclear and  molecular physics, spectroscopy and surface physicsAlthough all of similar ages and interests, as Macrae (1992) writes: 
 
 "The four Budapesters were as different as four men from similar backgrounds could be. They resembled one another only in the power of the intellects and in the nature of their professional careers. Wigner [...] is shy, painfully modest, quiet. Teller, after a lifetime of successful controversy, is emotional, extroverted and not one to hide his candle. Szilard was passionate, oblique, engagé, and infuriating. Johnny [...] was none of these. Johnny's most usual motivation was to try to make the next minute the most productive one for whatever intellectual business he had in mind."- Excerpt, John von Neumann by Norman Macrae (1992)Yet still, the four would work together off and on as they all emigrated to America and got involved in the Manhattan Project. 
 By  the time von Neumann enrolled in university in 1921, he had already  written a paper with one of his tutors, Mikhail Fekete on “A  generalization of Fejér’s theorem on the location of the roots of a  certain kind of polynomial” (Ulam, 1958). Fekete had along with  Laszló Rátz  reportedly taken a notice to von Neumann and begun tutoring him in  university-level mathematics. According to Ulam, even at the age of 18,  von Neumann was already recognized as a full-fledged mathematician. Of  an early set theory paper written by a 16 year old von Neumann,  Abraham Fraenkel (of  Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory fame) himself later stated (Ulam, 1958):
 
 
 Letter from Abraham Fraenkel to Stanislaw UlamIn University (1921–1926)As  Macrae (1992) writes, there was never much doubt that Johnny would one  day be attending university. Johnny’s father, Max, initially wanted him  to follow in his footsteps and become a well-paid financier, worrying  about the financial stability of a career in mathematics. However, with  the help of the encouragement from Hungarian mathematicians such as  Lipót Fejér  and Rudolf Ortvay, his father eventually acquiesced and decided to let  von Neumann pursue his passions, financing his studies abroad.Around 1922-23, being then professor at Marburg University, I received from Professor Erhard Schmidt, Berlin [...] a long manuscript of an author unknown to me, Johann von Neumann, with the title Die Axiomatisierung der Mengerlehre, this being his eventual doctor dissertation which appeared in the Zeitschrift only in 1928 [...] I asked to express my view since it seemed incomprehensible. I don't maintain that I understood anything, but enough to see that this was an outstanding work, and to recognize ex ungue leonem [the claws of the lion]. While answering in this sense, I invited the young scholar to visit me in Marburg, and discussed things with him, strongly advising him to prepare the ground for the understanding of so technical an essay by a more informal essay which could stress the new access to the problem and its fundamental consequences. He wrote such an essay under the title Eine Axiomatisierung der Mengerlehre and I published it in 1925.
 
 Johnny,  apparently in agreement with his father, decided initially to pursue a  career in chemical engineering. As he didn’t have any knowledge of  chemistry, it was arranged that he could take a two-year non-degree  course in chemistry at the University of Berlin. He did, from 1921 to  1923, afterwards sitting for and passing the entrance exam to the  prestigious  ETH Zurich.  Still interested in pursuing mathematics, he also simultaneously  entered University Pázmány Péter (now Eötvös Loránd University) in  Budapest as a Ph.D. candidate in mathematics. His Ph.D. thesis,  officially written under the supervision of Fejér, regarded the  axiomatization of  Cantor’s set theory. As he was officially in Berlin studying chemistry, he completed his Ph.D. largely in absentia, only appearing at the University in Budapest at the end of each term for exams. While in Berlin, he collaborated with  Erhard Schmidt  on set theory and also attended courses in physics, including  statistical mechanics taught by Albert Einstein. At ETH, starting in  1923, he continued both his studies in chemistry and his research in  mathematics.
 
 
 “Evidently, a Ph.D. thesis and examinations did not constitute an appreciable effort” — Eugene Wigner
 
 
  
 Two portraits of John von Neumann (1920s)In mathematics, he first studied  Hilbert’s theory of consistency with German mathematician  Hermann Weyl. He eventually graduated both as a chemical engineer from ETH and with Ph.D. in mathematics, summa cum laude from the University of Budapest in 1926 at 24 years old.
 
 
 “There  was a seminar for advanced students in Zürich that I was teaching and  von Neumann was in the class. I came to a certain theorem, and I said it  is not proved and it may be difficult. von Neumann didn’t say anything  but after five minutes he raised his hand. When I called on him he went  to the blackboard and proceeded to write down the proof. After that I  was afraid of von Neumann” —  George Pólya
 
 
  
 From von Neumann’s Fellowship application to the International Education Board (1926)His application to the  Rockefeller-financed International Education Board (above) for a six-month fellowship to continue his research at the  University of Göttingen  mentions Hungarian, German, English, French and Italian as spoken  languages, and was accompanied by letters of recommendation from  Richard Courant,  Hermann Weyl and  David Hilbert, three of the world’s foremost mathematicians at the time (Leonard, 2010).
 
 In Göttingen (1926–1930)
 
  
 The Auditorium Maximum at the University of Göttingen, 1935Johnny traveled to  Göttingen in the fall of 1926 to continue his work in mathematics under  David Hilbert,  likely the world’s foremost mathematician of that time. Reportedly,  according to Leonard (2010), von Neumann was initially attracted to  Hilbert’s stance in the debate over so-called  metamathematics, also known as  formalism  and that this is what drove him to study under Hilbert. In particular,  in his fellowship application, he wrote of his wish to conduct (Leonard,  2010)
 
 
 "Research over the bases of mathematics and of the general theory of sets, especially Hilbert's theory of uncontradictoriness [...], [investigations which] have the purpose of clearing up the nature of antinomies of the general theory of sets, and thereby to securely establish the classical foundations of mathematics. Such research render it possible to explain critically the doubts which have arisen in mathematics"Very much both in the vein and language of Hilbert, von Neumann was likely referring to the fundamental questions posed by  Georg Cantor regarding  the nature of infinite sets starting in the 1880s. von Neumann, along with  Wilhelm Ackermann and  Paul Bernays would eventually become Hilbert’s key assistants in the elaboration of his Entscheidungsproblem (“decision problem”) initiated in 1918. By the time he arrived in  Göttingen,  von Neumann was already well acquainted with the topic, in addition to  his Ph.D. dissertation having already published two related papers while  at ETH. 
 Set theoryJohn von Neumann wrote a cluster of papers on set theory and logic while in his twenties:
 
 
 von Neumann (1923). His first set theory paper is entitled  Zur Einführung der transfiniten Zahlen  (“On the introduction of transfinite numbers”) and regards Cantor’s  1897 definition of ordinal numbers as order types of well-ordered sets.  In the paper, von Neumann introduces a new theory of ordinal numbers,  which regards an ordinal as the set of the preceding ordinals (Van  Heijenoort, 1970).von Neumann (1925). His second set theory paper is entitled  Eine Axiomatisierung der Mengenlehre (“An axiomatization of set theory”). It is the first paper that introduces what would later be known as the  von Neumann-Bernays-Gödel set theory (NBG) and includes the first introduction of the concept of  a class, defined using the primitive notions of  functions and  arguments. In the paper, von Neumann takes a stance in the foundations of mathematics debate, objecting to  Brouwer and  Weyl’s  willingness to ‘sacrifice much of mathematics and set theory’, and  logicists’ ‘attempts to build mathematics on the axiom of reducibility’.  Instead, he argued for the axiomatic approach of  Zermelo and  Fraenkel, which, in von Neumann’s view, replaced vagueness with rigor (Leonard, 2010).von Neumann (1926). His third paper Az általános halmazelmélet axiomatikus felépitése, his  doctoral dissertation, which contains the main points which would be  published in German for the first time in his fifth paper.von Neumann (1928). In his fourth set theory paper, entitled Die Axiomatisierung der Mengenlehre  (“The Axiomatization of Set Theory”), von Neumann formally lays out his  own axiomatic system. With its single page of axioms, it was the most  succinct set theory axioms developed at the time, and formed the basis  for the system later developed by  Gödel and Berneys.von Neumann (1928). His fifth paper on set theory, “Über die Definition durch transfinite Induktion und verwandte Fragen der allgemeinen Mengenlehre” (“On  the Definition by Transfinite Induction and related questions of  General Set Theory”) proves the possibility of definition by transfinite  induction. That is, in the paper von Neumann demonstrates the  significance of axioms for the elimination of the  paradoxes of set theory,  proving that a set does not lead to contradictions if and only if its  cardinality is not the same as the cardinality of all sets, which  implies the  axiom of choice (Leonard, 2010).von Neumann (1929). In his sixth set theory paper, Über eine Widerspruchsfreiheitsfrage in der axiomatischen Mengenlehre, von Neumann discusses the questions of relative consistency in set theory (Van Heijenoort, 1970).Summarized,  von Neumann’s main contribution to set theory is what would become the  von Neumann-Bernays-Gödel set theory (NBG), an axiomatic set theory that  is considered a conservative extension of the accepted Zermelo-Fraenkel  set theory (ZFC). It introduced the notion of class (a collection of  sets defined by a formula whose quantifiers range only over sets) and  can define classes that are larger than sets, such as the class of all  sets and the class of all ordinal numbers. 
 
  
 
  
 Left: John von Neumann in the 1920s. Right: von Neumann, J (1923).  Zur Einführung der transfiniten Zahlen (“On the introduction of transfinite numbers”). Acta Litterarum ac Scientiarum Regiae Universitatis Hungaricae Francisco-Josephinae, sectio scientiarum mathematicarum, 1, pp. 199–208.
 Inspired by the works of  Georg Cantor, Ernst Zermelo’s  1908 axioms for set theory  and the 1922 critiques of Zermelo’s set theory by Fraenkel and Skolem,  von Neumann’s work provided solutions to some of the problems of Zermelo  set theory, leading to the eventual development of Zermelo-Fraenkel set  theory (ZFC). The problems he helped resolve include:
 
 
 The problem of developing Cantor’s theory of  ordinal numbers in Zermelo set theory. von Neumann redefined ordinals using sets that are well-ordered using the so-called ?-relation.The problem of finding a criterion identifying  classes  that are too large to be sets. von Neumann introduced the criterion  that a class is too large to be a set if and only if it can be mapped  onto the class of all sets.Zermelo’s somewhat imprecise concept of a ‘definite propositional function’ in his  axiom of separation. von Neumann formalized the concept with his functions, whose construction requires only finitely many axioms.The  problem of Zermelo’s foundations of the empty set and an infinite set,  and iterating the axioms of pairing, union, power set, separation and  choice to generate new sets. Fraenkel introduced an axiom to exclude  sets. von Neumann revised Fraenkel’s formulation in his  axiom of regularity to exclude non-well-founded sets.Of  course, following the critiques and further revisions of Zermelo’s set  theory by Fraenkel, Skolem, Hilbert and von Neumann, a young  mathematician by the name of  Kurt Gödel  in 1930 published a paper which would effectively end von Neumann’s  efforts in formalist set theory, and indeed Hilbert’s formalist program  altogether, his  theorem of incompleteness. von Neumann happened to be in the audience when Gödel first presented it: 
 
 "At a mathematical conference preceding Hilbert's address, a quiet, obscure young man, Kurt Gödel, only a year beyond his PhD, announced a result which would forever change the foundations of mathematics. He formalized the liar paradox, "This statement is false" to prove roughly that for any effectively axiomatized consistent extension T of number theory (Peano arithmetic) there is a sentence s which asserts its own unprovability in T.John von Neumann, who was in the audience immediately understood the importance of Gödel's incompleteness theorem. He was at the conference representing Hilbert's proof theory program and recognized that Hilbert's program was over.In the next few weeks von Neumann realized that by arithmetizing the proof of Gödel's first theorem, one could prove an even better one, that no such formal system T could prove its own consistency. A few weeks later he brought his proof to Gödel, who thanked him and informed him politely that he had already submitted the second incompleteness theorem for publication."- Excerpt, Computability. Turing, Gödel, Church and Beyond by Copeland et al. (2015)One of Gödel’s lifelong supporters, von Neumann later stated that 
 
 “Gödel is absolutely irreplaceable. In a class by himself.”By the end of 1927, von Neumann had published twelve major papers in mathematics. His habilitation (qualification to conduct independent university teaching) was completed in December of 1927, and he began lecturing as a  Privatdozent at the University of Berlin in 1928 at the age of 25, the youngest Privatdozent ever elected in the university’s history in any subject.
 
 
 
 "By the middle of 1927 it was clearly desirable for the young eagle Johnny to soar from Hilbert's nest. Johnny had spent his undergraduate years explaining what Hilbert had got magnificently right but was now into his postgraduate years where had to explain what Hilbert had got wrong"- Excerpt, John von Neumann by Norman Macrae (1992)Game theoryAround the same time he was making contributions to set theory, von Neumann also proved a theorem known as the  minimax theorem for zero-sum games, which would later lay the foundation for the new field of  game theory as a mathematical discipline. The minimax theorem may be summarized as follows: 
 
 The Minimax Theorem (von Neumann, 1928)The proof was published in Zur Theorie der Gesellschaftsspiele (“On the Theory of Games of Strategy”) in 1928. In collaboration with economist  Oskar Morgenstern, von Neumann later published the definitive book on such cooperative, zero-sum games, Theory of Games and Economic Behavior (1944).The minimax theorem provides the conditions that guarantee that the max-min inequality is also an equality, i.e. that every finite, zero-sum, two-person game has optimal mixed strategies.
 
 
  
 
  
 Left: von Neumann, J. (1928). Zur Theorie der Gesellschaftsspiele (“On the Theory of Games of Strategy”). Right: First edition  copy of Theory of Games and Economic Behavior (1944) by John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern (Photo:  Whitmore Rare Books).
 By  the end of 1929, von Neumann’s number of published major papers had  risen to 32, averaging almost one major paper per month. In 1929 he  briefly became a Privatdozent at the University of Hamburg, where he found the prospects of becoming a professor to be better.
 
 Quantum mechanicsIn  a shortlist von Neumann himself submitted to the National Academy of  Sciences later in his life, he listed his work on quantum mechanics in  Göttingen (1926) and Berlin (1927–29) as the “most essential”. The term quantum mechanics,  largely devised by Göttingen’s own twenty-three year old wunderkind  Werner Heisenberg the year before was still hotly debated, and in the same year von Neumann arrived,  Erwin Schrödinger, then working from Switzerland, had rejected Heisenberg’s formulation as completely wrong (Macrae, 1992). As the story goes:
 
 
 "In Johnny's early weeks at Göttingen in 1926, Heisenberg lectured on the difference between his and Schrödinger's theories. The aging Hilbert, professor of mathematics, asked his physics assistant, Lothar Nordheim, what on earth this young man Heisenberg was talking about. Nordheim sent to the professor a paper that Hilbert still did not understand. To quote Nordheim himself, as recorded in Heims's book: "When von Neumann saw this, he cast it in a few days into elegant axiomatic form, much to the liking of Hilbert." To Hilbert's delight, Johnny's mathematical exposition made much use of Hilbert's own concept of Hilbert space."- Excerpt, John von Neumann by Norman Macrae (1992)Starting  with the incident above, in the following years, von Neumann published a  set of papers which would establish a rigorous mathematical framework  for quantum mechanics, now known as the  Dirac-von Neumann axioms. As Van Hove (1958) writes, 
 
 "By the time von Neumann started his investigations on the formal framework of quantum mechanics this theory was known in two different mathematical formulations: the "matrix mechanics" of Heisenberg, Born and Jordan, and the "wave mechanics" of Schrödinger. The mathematical equivalence of these formulations had been established by Schrödinger, and they had both been embedded as special cases in a general formalism, often called "transformation theory", developed by Dirac and Jordan.This formalism, however, was rather clumsy and it was hampered by its reliance upon ill-defined mathematical objects, the famous delta-functions of Dirac and their derivatives. [..] [von Neumann] soon realized that a much more natural framework was provided by the abstract, axiomatic theory of Hilbert spaces and their linear operators."- Excerpt, Von Neumann's Contributions to Quantum Theory by Léon Van Hove (1958)In the period from 1927–31, von Neumann published five highly influential papers relating to quantum mechanics: 
 
 von Neumann (1927). Mathematische Begründung der Quantenmechanik (“Mathematical  Foundation of Quantum Mechanics”) in Nachrichten von der Gesellschaft  der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen, Mathematisch-Physikalische Klasse pp.  1–57.von Neumann (1927). Wahrscheinlichkeitstheoretischer Aufbau der Quantenmechanik  (“Probabilistic Theory of Quantum Mechanics”) in Nachrichten von der  Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen, Mathematisch-Physikalische  Klasse pp. 245–272.von Neumann (1927). Thermodynamik quantenmechanischer Gesamtheiten  (“Thermodynamics of Quantum Mechanical Quantities”) in Nachrichten von  der Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen,  Mathematisch-Physikalische Klasse. pp. 273–291.von Neumann (1930). Allgemeine Eigenwerttheorie Hermitescher Funktionaloperatoren (“General Eigenvalue Theory of Hermitian Functional Operators”) in Mathematische Annalen 102 (1) pp 49–131.von Neumann (1931). Die Eindeutigkeit der Schrödingerschen Operatoren (“The uniqueness of Schrödinger operators”) in Mathematische Annalsen 104 pp 570–578.His basic insight, which neither Heisenberg,  Bohr or Schrödinger had, in the words of  Paul Halmos was “that  the geometry of the vectors in a Hilbert space as the same formal  properties as the structure of the states of a quantum mechanical  system” (Macrae, 1992). That is, von Neumann realized that a state of a quantum system could be represented by the point of a complex  Hilbert space,  that in general, could be infinite-dimensional even for a single  particle. In such a formal view of quantum mechanics, observable  quantities such as position or momentum are represented as linear  operators acting on the Hilbert space associated with the quantum system  (Macrae, 1992). The  uncertainty principle, for instance, in von Neumann’s system is translated into the  non-commutativity of two corresponding operators. 
 Summarized, von Neumann’s contributions to quantum mechanics can be said to broadly be two-fold, consisting of:
 
 
 The mathematical framework of quantum theory, where  states of the physical system are described by Hilbert space vectors  and measurable quantities (such as position, momentum and energy) by  unbounded hermitian operators acting upon them; andThe statistical aspects of quantum theory. In  the course of his formulation of quantum mechanics in terms of vectors  and operators in Hilbert spaces, von Neumann also gave the basic rule  for how the theory should be understood statistically (Van Hove, 1958).  That is, as the result of the measurement of a given physical quantity  on a system in a given quantum state, its probability distribution  should be expressed by means of a vector representing the state and the  spectral resolution of the operator representing the physical quantity. 
  
 First edition copy of Mathematische Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik (1932) by John von NeumannHis work on quantum mechanics was eventually collected in the highly influential 1932 book Mathematische Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik (“Mathematical  Foundations for Quantum Mechanics”), considered the first rigorous and  complete mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics.
 
 
 Quantum mechanics was very fortunate indeed to attract, in the very first years after its discovery in 1925,  the interest of a mathematical genius of von Neumann’s stature. As a  result, the mathematical framework of the theory was developed and the  formal aspects of its entirely novel rules of interpretation were  analysed by one single man in two years (1927–1929). — Van Hove (1958)Operator theoryFollowing  his work in set theory and quantum mechanics, while still in Berlin,  von Neumann next turned his attention to algebra, in particular operator  theory which concerns the study of  linear operators on  function spaces. The most trivial examples are the  differential and  integral operators  we all remember from calculus. von Neumann introduced the study of  rings of operators through his invention of what is now known as  von Neumann algebras, defined as
 
 
 
 Definition of a von Neumann algebraThe work was published in the paper Zur Algebra der Funktionaloperationen und Theorie der normalen Operatoren (“On the Algebra of Functional Operations and Theory of Normal Operators”) in 1930.A von Neumann algebra is a *-algebra of bounded operators on a Hilbert space that is closed in the weak operator topology and contains the identify operator
 
 In AmericaJohn von Neumann first travelled to America while still a Privatdozent  at the University of Hamburg in October 1929 when he was invited to  lecture on quantum theory at Princeton University. The visit led to an  invitation to return as a visiting professor, which he did in the years  1930–33. The same year this tenure finished, Adolf Hitler first came to  power in Germany, leading von Neumann to  abandon his academic posts in Europe altogether, stating about the Nazi regime that
 
 
 “If these boys continue for two more years, they will ruin German science for a generation — at least”By  most accounts, of course, von Neumann’s prediction turned out true. The  following year, when asked by the Nazi minister of education “How mathematics is going at Göttingen, now that it is free from the Jewish influence?” Hilbert is said to have replied:
 
 
 
 “There is no mathematics in Göttingen anymore.”At Princeton University (1930–1933)The  circumstances under which von Neumann (and a plethora of other  first-rate mathematicians and physicists) would find themselves in  Princeton, New Jersey in the mid-1930s is  by now well known.
 
 
 In the case of von Neumann in particular, he was recruited alongside his Lutheran high school contemporary  Eugene Wigner by Princeton University professor  Oswald Veblen, on a recommendation from Princeton, according to Wigner (Macrae, 1992) to:
 
 
 "..invite not a single person but at least two, who already knew each other, who wouldn't suddenly feel put on an island where they had no intimate contact with anybody. Johnny's name was of course well known by that time the world over, so they decided to invite Johnny von Neumann. They looked: who wrote articles with John von Neumann? They found: Mr. Wigner. So they sent a telegram to me also."- Excerpt, John von Neumann by Norman Macrae (1992)And  so von Neumann first came to Princeton in 1930 as a visiting professor.  Regarding his work while there, von Neumann himself later in life  especially highlighted his work on ergodic theory. 
 Ergodic theoryErgodic  theory is the branch of mathematics that studies the statistical  properties of deterministic dynamical systems. Formally, ergodic theory  is concerned with the states of dynamical systems with an invariant measure. Informally,  think of how the planets move according to Newtonian mechanics in a  solar system: the planets move but the rule governing the planets’  motion remains constant. In two papers published in 1932, von Neumann  made foundational contributions to the theory of such systems, including  the  von Neumann’s mean ergodic theorem,  considered the first rigorous mathematical basis for the statistical  mechanics of liquids and gases. The two papers are titled Proof of the Quasi-ergodic Hypothesis (1932) and Physical Applications of the Ergodic Hypothesis (1932).
 
 A subfield of  measure theory,  ergodic theory in other words concerns the behavior of dynamical  systems which are allowed to run for a long time. von Neumann’s ergodic  theorem is one of the two most important theorems in the field, the  other being by Birkhoff (1931). According to Halmos (1958)
 
 
 "The profound insight to be gained from [von Neumann's] paper is that the whole problem is essentially group-theoretic in character, and that, in particular, for the solvability of the problem of measure the ordinary algebraic concept of solvability of a group is relevant. Thus, according to von Neumann, it is the change of group that makes a difference, not the change of space; replacing the group of rigid motions by other perfectly reasonable groups we can produce unsolvable problems in R2 and solvable ones in R3."- Excerpt, Von Neumann on Measure and Ergodic Theory by Paul R. Halmos (1958) “If von Neumann had never done anything else, they would have been sufficient to guarantee him mathematical immortality” — Paul Halmos (1958)At the Institute for Advanced StudyFollowing  his three-year stay as a visiting professor at Princeton in the period  1930–33, von Neumann was offered a lifetime professorship on the faculty  of the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) in 1933. He was 30 years old.  The offer came after the the institute’s plan to appoint von Neumann’s  former professor  Hermann Weyl  fell through (Macrae, 1992). Having only been founded three years  prior, von Neumann became one of the IAS’ first six professors, the  others being  J. W. Alexander, Albert Einstein,  Marston Morse, Oswald Veblen and eventually, Hermann Weyl.
 
 
 
  
 Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey (Photo: Cliff Compton)When he joined in 1933, the Institute was still located in the math department of Princeton University’s  Fine Hall. Founded in 1930 by  Abraham Flexner and funded by philanthropy money from  Louis Bamberger and  Caroline Bamberger Fuld,  the Institute for Advanced Study was and is still a university unlike  any other. Inspired by Flexner’s experiences at Heidelberg University,  All Souls College, Oxford and the Collège de France, the IAS has been  described as
 
 
 “ A first-rate research  institution with no teachers, no students, no classes, but only  researchers protected from the vicissitudes and pressures of the outside  world.” — Sylvia Nasar (1998)In 1939 moved to its own campus and common room  Fuld Hall,  the Institute for Advanced Study in a matter of a few years in the  early 1930s effectively inherited the University of Göttingen’s throne  as the foremost center of the mathematical universe. The dramatic and  swift change has since become known as the  “Great Purge” of 1933,  as a number of top rate academics fled Europe, fearing for their  safety. Among them, in addition to von Neumann and Wigner, of course was  Einstein (1933),  Max Born (1933), fellow Budapestians  Leó Szilárd (1938) and  Edward Teller (1933), as well as  Edmund Landau (1927),  James Franck (1933) and  Richard Courant (1933), among others.
 
 
 
  
 
  
 Left:  Photo of part of the faculty at the Institute for Advanced Study,  including its most famous resident Albert Einstein, and John von  Neumann, visible in the background. Right: Julian Bigelow, Herman Goldstine,  J. Robert Oppenheimer and John von Neumann in front of MANIAC, the Institute for Advanced Study computer.
 GeometryWhile at the Institute for Advanced Study, von Neumann founded the field of  continuous geometry,  an analogue of complex projective geometry where instead of a dimension  of a subspace being in a discrete set 0, 1, …, n, it can be an element  of the unit interval [0,1].
 
 
 A continuous geometry is a lattice L with the following properties:- L is modularAs  with his result in ergodic theory, von Neumann published two papers on  continuous geometry, one proving its existence and discussing its  properties, and one providing examples:- L is complete
 - The lattice operations satisfy a continuity property
 - Every element in L has a complement
 - L is irreducible, meaning the only elements with unique complements are 0 and 1
 
 
 von Neumann (1936). Continuous geometry. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 22 (2) pp. 92–100.von Neumann (1936). Examples of continuous geometries. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 22 (2) pp. 101–108;The Manhattan Project (1937–1945)In addition to his academic pursuits, beginning in the mid to late 30s, von Neumann developed an expertise in the science of  explosions,  phenomena which are very hard to model mathematically. In particular,  von Neumann became a leading authority on the mathematics of shaped  charges, explosive charges shaped to focus the effect of the energy of  an explosive. 
 By 1937, according to Macrae, von Neumann  had decided for himself that war was clearly coming. Although obviously  suited for advanced strategic and operations work, humbly he instead  applied to become a lieutenant in the reserve of the ordnance department  of the U.S.Army. As a member of the Officers’s Reserve Corps, this  would mean that he could get trouble-free access to various sorts of  explosion statistics, which he thought would be fascinating (Macrae,  1992).
 
 
  
 
  
 Left: The photo from von Neumann’s Los Alamos ID badge. Right: John von Neumann talking with Richard Feynman and Stanislaw Ulam in Los Alamos (Photo: )
 Needless  to say, von Neumann‘s main contributions to the atomic bomb would not  be as a lieutenant in the reserve of the ordnance department, but rather  in the concept and design of the  explosive lenses that were needed to compress the plutonium core of the  Fat Man weapon that was later dropped on Nagasaki.
 
 A  member of the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos, New Mexico, von Neumann  in 1944 showed that the pressure increase from explosion shock wave  reflections from solid objects was greater than previously believed,  depending on the angle of its incidence. The discovery led to the  decision to detonate atomic bombs some kilometers above the target,  rather than on impact (Macrae, 1992). von Neumann was present during the  first Trinity test on July 16th, 1945 in the Nevada desert as the first  atomic bomb test ever successfully detonated.
 
 Work on philosophy
 
  
 von Neumann speaking at the American Philosophical Society in 1957. Photo: Alfred EisenstaedtMacrae  (1992) makes the point that in addition to being one of the foremost  mathematicians in his lifetime, in many ways, von Neumann should perhaps  also be considered one of his era’s most important philosophers.  Professor of philosophy  John Dorling  at the University of Amsterdam, in particular, highlights in particular  von Neumann’s contributions to the philosophy of mathematics (including  set theory, number theory and Hilbert spaces), physics (especially  quantum theory), economics (game theory), biology (cellular automata),  computers and artificial intelligence.
 
 His work on the  latter two, computers and artificial intelligence (AI) occurred first  while he was in Princeton in the mid 1930s meeting with the 24 year old  Alan Turing first when the latter spent a year at the IAS in 1936–37. Turing began his career by  working in the same field as von Neumann had — on working on set theory, logic and Hilbert’s Entscheidungsproblem.  When he finished his Ph.D at Princeton in 1938, Turing had extended the  work of von Neumann and Gödel and introduced ordinal logic and the  notion of relative computing, augmenting his previously devised Turing  machines with so-called oracle machines, allowing the study of problems  that lay beyond the capabilities of Turing machines. Although inquired  about by von Neumann for a position as a postdoctoral research assistant  following his Ph.D., Turing declined and instead travelled back to  England.(Macrae, 1992).
 
 Work on computing
 "After having been here for a month, I was talking to von Neumann about various kinds of inductive processes and evolutionary processes, and just as an aside he said, "Of course that's what Turing was talking about." And I said, "Who's Turing?". And he said, "Go look up Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, 1937".The fact that there is a universal machine to imitate all other machines ... was understood by von Neumann and few other people. And when he understood it, then he knew what we could do." - Julian Bigelow"- Excerpt, Turing's Cathedral by George Dyson (2012)Although  Turing left, von Neumann continued thinking about computers throughout  the end of the 30s and the war. Following his experiences working on the  Manhattan Project, he was first drawn into the  ENIAC project  at the Moore School of Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania  during the summer of 1944. Having observed the large amounts of  calculation needed to predict blast radii, plan bomb paths and break  encryption schemes, von Neumann early saw the need for substantial  increases in computing power. 
 In 1945, von Neumann proposed a description for a computer architecture now known as the  von Neumann architecture, which includes the basics of a modern electronic digital computer including:
 
 
 A processing unit that contains an arithmetic logic unit and processor registers;A control unit that contains an instruction register and a program counterA memory unit that can store data and instructions;External storage; andInput and output mechanisms; 
 
  
 John von Neumann with the  IAS machine, sometimes called the “von Neumann Machine”, stored in the the basement of Fuld Hall from 1942–1951 (Photo:  Alan Richards)
 The same year, in software engineering, von Neumann invented the so-called  merge sort algorithm  which divides arrays in half before sorting them recursively and then  merging them. von Neumann himself wrote the first 23 page sorting  program for the EDVAC computer in ink. In addition, in a pioneering 1953  paper entitled  Probabilistic Logics and the Synthesis of Reliable Organisms from Unrealiable Components, von Neumann was first to introduce  stochastic computing,  though the idea was so groundbreaking that it could not be implemented  for another decade or so (Petrovik & Siljak, 1962). Related, von  Neumann created the field of cellular  automata  through his rigorous mathematical treatment of the structure of  self-replication, which preceded the discovery of the structure of DNA  by several years.
 
 Although influential in his own right,  throughout his life, von Neumann made sure to acknowledge that the  central concept of the modern computer was indeed  Turing’s 1936 paper On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem (Fraenkel, 1972)
 
 
 ”von  Neumann firmly emphasised to me, and to others I am sure, that the  fundamental conception is owing to Turing — insofar as not anticipated  by Babbage, Lovelace and others.” — Stanley Fraenkel (1972)Consultancies
 
 "The only part of your thinking we'd like to bid for systematically is that which you spend shaving: we'd like you to pass on to us any ideas that come to you while so engaged."Excerpt, Letter from the Head of the RAND Corporation to von Neumann (Poundstone, 1992)Throughout  his career in America, von Neumann held a number of consultancies for  various private, public and defense contractors including the National  Defense Research Council (NDRC), the Weapons Systems Evaluation Group  (WSEG), the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the Lawrence Livermore  National Laboratory (LLNL) and the RAND Corporation, in addition to  being an advisor to the Armed Forces Specials Weapons Project, a member  of the General Advisory Committee of the Atomic Energy Commission, of  the Scientific Advisory Group of the United States Air Force and in 1955  a commissioner of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). 
 
  
 PersonalityDespite  his many appointments, responsibilities and copious research output,  von Neumann lived a rather unusual lifestyle for a mathematician. As  described by Vonnauman and Halmos:
 
 
 “Parties  and nightlife held a special appeal for von Neumann. While teaching in  Germany, von Neumann had been a denizen of the Cabaret-era Berlin  nightlife circuit.” — Vonneuman (1987)
 The parties at the von Neumann’s house were frequent, and famous, and long. — Halmos (1958)
 
 
 
 
  
 John von Neumann with his wife Klari Dan and their dog (Photo:  Alan Richards)
 
 His first wife, Klara, said that he could count everything except calories.von Neumann also enjoyed  Yiddish  and dirty jokes, especially limericks (Halmos, 1958). He was a  non-smoker, but at the IAS received complaints for regularly playing  extremely loud German march music on the gramophone in his office,  distracting those in neighboring offices, including Albert Einstein. In  fact, von Neumann claimed to do some of his best work in noisy, chaotic  environments such as in the living room of his house with the television  blaring. Despite being a bad driver, he loved driving, often while  reading books, leading to various arrests and accidents.
 
 
 
  
 Von Neumann in the Florida Everglades in 1938 (Photo: Marina von Neumann Whitman)As a thinkerStanislaw Ulam, one of von Neumann’s close friends, described von Neumann’s mastery of mathematics as follows:
 
 
 “Most mathematicians know one method. For example,  Norbert Wiener had mastered Fourier transforms. Some mathematicians have mastered two methods and might really impress someone who knows only one of them. John von Neumann had mastered three methods: 1) A facility for the symbolic manipulation of linear operators, 2) An intuitive feeling for the logical structure of any new mathematical theory; and 3) An intuitive feeling for the combinatorial superstructure of new theories.”Biographer  Sylvia Nasar describes von Neumann’s own “thinking machine” by the  following, now well-known anecdote regarding the so-called “ two trains puzzle”: 
 
 Two bicyclists start twenty miles apart and head toward each other, each going at a steady rate of 10 m.p.h. At the same time, a fly that travels at a steady 15 m.p.h. starts from the front wheel of the southbound bicycle and flies to the front wheel of the northbound one, then turns around and flies to the front wheel of the southbound one again, and continues in this manner till he is crushed between the two front wheels. Question: what total distance did the fly cover?There are two ways to answer the problem. One is to calculate the distance the fly covers on each leg of its trips between the two bicycles and finally sum the infinite series so obtained. The quick way is to observe that the bicycles meet exactly an hour after they start so that the fly had just an hour for his travels; the answer must therefore be 15 miles. When the question was put to von Neumann, he solved it in an instant, and thereby disappointed the questioner: “Oh, you must have heard the trick before!” “What trick,” asked von Neumann, “all I did was sum the infinite series.”Excerpt, A Beautiful Mind (Nasar, 1998)As a supervisor 
  
 In the paper  Szeged in 1934  (Lorch, 1993) Edgar R. Lorch describes his experience of working as an  assistant for von Neumann in the 1930s, including his duties:
 
 
 Attending  von Neumann’s lectures on operator theory, taking notes, completing  unfinished proofs and circulating them to all American university  libraries;Assisting von Neumann in his role as the  editor of the Annals of Mathematics by reading through every manuscript  accepted to the publication, underlining greek letters in red and german  letters in green, circling italics, writing notes to printers in the  margins and going once per week to the printers in order to instruct  them in the art of typesetting;Translating von Neumann’s numerous 100-page papers into English; "His fluid line of thought was difficult for those less gifted to follow. He was notorious for dashing out equations on a small portion of the available blackboard and erasing expressions before students could copy them."- Excerpt, John von Neumann: As Seen by his Brother by N.A. Vonneuman (1987)Later years 
  
 President Dwight D. Eisenhower (left) presenting John von Neumann (right) the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1956In  1955, Von Neumann was diagnosed with what was likely either bone,  pancreatic or prostate cancer (accounts differ on which diagnosis was  made first). He was 51 years old. Following two years of illness which  at the end confined him to a wheelchair, he eventually died on the 8th  of February 1957, at 53 years old. On his deathbed, he reportedly  entertained his brother by reciting the first few lines of each page  from Goethe’s  Faust, word-for-word, by heart (Blair, 1957).
 
 He is buried at Princeton Cemetery in Princeton, New Jersey alongside his lifelong friends  Eugene Wigner and  Kurt Gödel. Gödel wrote him  a letter  a year before his death, which has been made public. The letter is  discussed in detail by Hartmanis (1989) in his working paper  The Structural Complexity Column. An excerpt is included below:
 
 
 Letter from Kurt Gödel to von Neumann, March 20th 1956Dear Mr. von Neumann:Interview on TelevisionRemarkably, there exists a video interview with von Neumann on the NBC show  America’s Youth Wants to Know in the early 1950s (below):With the greatest sorrow I have learned of your illness. The news came to me as quite unexpected. Morgenstern already last summer told me of a bout of weakness you once had, but at that time he thought that this was not of any greater significance. As I hear, in the last months you have undergone a radical treatment and I am happy that this treatment was successful as desired, and that you are now doing better. I hope and wish for you that your condition will soon improve even more and that the newest medical discoveries, if possible, will lead to a complete recovery.[...]I would be very happy to hear something from you personally. Please let me know if there is something that I can do for you. With my best greetings and wishes, as well to your wife,Sincerely yours,
 Kurt GödelP.S. I heartily congratulate you on the award that the American government has given to you
 
 For  anyone interested in learning more about the life and work of John von  Neumann, I especially recommend his friend Stanislaw Ulam’s 1958  essay John von Neumann 1903–1957 in the Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 64 (3) pp 1–49 and the book  John von Neumann* by Norman Macrae (1992).
 
 This essay is part of a series of stories on math-related topics, published in  Cantor’s Paradise, a weekly Medium publication. Thank you for reading!
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