Thesis ID: CBB001567434

Conditional Inequalities: American Pure and Applied Mathematics, 1940--1975 (2013)

unapi

Steingart, Alma (Author)


Kaiser, David
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT


Publication Date: 2013
Edition Details: Advisor: Kaiser, David.
Language: English

This study investigates the status of mathematical knowledge in mid-century America. It is motivated by questions such as: when did mathematical theories become applicable to a wide range of fields from medicine to the social science? How did this change occur? I ask after the implications of this transformation for the development of mathematics as an academic discipline and how it affected what it meant to be a mathematician. How did mathematicians understand the relation between abstractions and generalizations on the one hand and their manifestation in concrete problems on the other? Mathematics in Cold War America was caught between the sciences and the humanities. This dissertation tracks the ways this tension between the two shaped the development of professional identities, pedagogical regimes, and the epistemological commitments of the American mathematical community in the postwar period. Focusing on the constructed division between pure and applied mathematics, it therefore investigates the relationship of scientific ideas to academic and governmental institutions, showing how the two are mutually inclusive. Examining the disciplinary formation of postwar mathematics, I show how ideas about what mathematics is and what it should be crystallized in institutional contexts, and how in turn these institutions reshaped those ideas. Tuning in to the ways different groups of mathematicians strove to make sense of the transformations in their fields and the way they struggled to implement their ideological convictions into specific research agendas and training programs sheds light on the co-construction of mathematics, the discipline, and mathematics as a body of knowledge. The relation between pure and applied mathematics and between mathematics and the rest of the sciences were disciplinary concerns as much as they were philosophical musings. As the reconfiguration of the mathematical field during the second half of the twentieth century shows, the dynamic relation between the natural and the human sciences reveals as much about institutions, practices, and nations as it does about epistemological commitments. (Copies available exclusively from MIT Libraries, libraries.mit.edu/docs - docs@mit.edu)

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Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 75/03(E), Sep 2014. Proquest Document ID: 1476206339.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567434/

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Authors & Contributors
Phillips, Christopher J.
Shin, Youjung
Elzway, Salem
Kate Zernike
Yuan, Yuan
Wildenberg, Thomas
Journals
Statistical Science
Science
Rittenhouse: Journal of the American Scientific Instrument Enterprise
Physics in Perspective
Osiris: A Research Journal Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Journal of the History of the Neurosciences
Publishers
University of Wisconsin at Madison
University of Maryland, College Park
University of Chicago Press
Scribner
MIT Press
Concepts
Mathematics
Cold War
Applied mathematics
Science and politics
Mathematics education
Algorithms
People
Begle, Edward Griffith
Schmitt, Francis Otto
Morrison, Phillip
Luce, Robert Duncan
Gronwall, Thomas Hakon
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century, early
20th century
19th century
Places
United States
Soviet Union
Great Britain
Institutions
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT
Carnegie Institute of Technology
Lincoln Laboratory
Stanford University
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