Max Scheler
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Introduction

Erhard Scholz

pp. 161-164

Abstrakt

It happens rarely that an individual is capable of pioneering work in several fields. Hermann Weyl was just such an individual, a profound thinker of wide intellectual range, a giant of our times. His vision was unique and penetrating not only in mathematics, but also in mathematical physics and in philosophy of science. Humanity, compassion and a powerful sense of the beautiful were the hallmarks of his personality and characteristic of his intellectual endeavour. The sheer range of his genius and his persistent search for a harmonious, intelligible architecture of the physical universe at once links him to the last great universalist mathematicians and thinkers of the nineteenth century such as Hilbert and Poincaré, and stands as a promise and anticipation of the future development of science and mathematics.

Publication details

Published in:

Scholz Erhard (2001) Hermann Weyl's "Raum — Zeit — Materie" and a general introduction to his scientific work. Basel, Birkhäuser.

Seiten: 161-164

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-0348-8278-1_5

Referenz:

Scholz Erhard (2001) „Introduction“, In: E. Scholz (ed.), Hermann Weyl's "Raum — Zeit — Materie" and a general introduction to his scientific work, Basel, Birkhäuser, 161–164.