Neumann
János
John von Neumann (1903-1957)
World renown Hungarian born American scientist.
John von Neumann was born in Budapest into an upper middle class
family which afforded him an education at a private school in Zürich
Switzerland. During the 1920s he studied higher math and logic at
universities in Berlin and Budapest (at the Technical University
of Budapest "Muszaki Egyetem" where one can find a statue of him).
Sensing the dangers of rising anti-Semitism and desiring more freedom
of theoretical research Neumann left Europe for the United States
to join the faculty of Princeton University in New Jersey. Here
he was able to advance his theory of game logic better known as
"Game Theory". Although it was a French Mathematician Emile Borel
who first explored the concept Neumann was the first to develop
a full theory. Game Theory is a mathematical (logic) oriented system
of analysis of any particular situation (game or interaction) where
a conflict of interst exists with the purpose in mind of finding
out what optimal choices (moves or reactions) exist that given certain
conditions will bring about an outcome closest to the one desired
by the player or party. Today it is used extensively by scientists
and economists.
John von Neumann became an associate of the Institue for Advanced
Study in Princeton New Jersey in 1933 and with relatively unlimited
means at hand he was able to work on many different projects. Among
them is the one project that even Bill Gates of Microsoft will acknowledge
forever changed the world. That was Neumann's creation of a digital
storage and retrieval system that first allowed computers to be
used for multifunctional purposes such as word processing and strategic
defense planning. In effect Neumann invented the basic system behind
all ROM-based computers (virtually every computer in use today)!
As if Game Theory and flexible stored programming were not enough
Neumann who was made a U.S. citizen in 1937 was instrumental in
ending World War II by virtue of the fact that he developed most
of the mathematical projections concerning the dropping of the Atomic
Bomb. During his years at Los Alamos he worked with Oppenheimer
and Edward Teller (inventor of the Hydrogen Bomb). He was a friend
of Einstein. In 1956 a year before his fatal heart-attack the Atomic
Energy Commission awarded him the Enrico Fermi Award. Neumann died
at the relatively young age of 54.
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