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On Emmy Noether’s Role in the Relativity Revolution

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Notes

  1. A shorter version of this paper was published last year to mark the centenary of Noether’s theorems: “Emmy Noether, la centenaire d’un thèorème,” Pour la science, August 2018, pp. 72–78.

  2. For a broader discussion of relativity in Göttingen during the First World War, see [Rowe 2004].

  3. For a discussion of their experiences as students there, see [Parshall and Rowe 1994, 239–253]. The earlier case of Sofia Kovalevskaya, who received her doctorate in absentia from Göttingen in 1874, was an entirely exceptional situation that had nothing to do with general policies regarding women.

  4. Nachlass Rudolf Jakob Humm, Zentralbibliothek Zürich.

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Correspondence to David E. Rowe.

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Years Ago features essays by historians and mathematicians that take us back in time. Whether addressing special topics or general trends, individual mathematicians or "schools" (as in schools of fish), the idea is always the same: to shed new light on the mathematics of the past. Submissions are welcome.

Submissions should be uploaded to http://tmin.edmgr.com or sent directly to Jemma Lorenat, e-mail: jlorenat@pitzer.edu.

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Rowe, D.E. On Emmy Noether’s Role in the Relativity Revolution. Math Intelligencer 41, 65–72 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00283-018-9833-3

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