Tibor frank



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Tibor FRANK



Eötvös Loránd University

Budapest, Hungary

tzsbe@hu.inter.net

www.franktibor.hu


The Social Construction of Hungarian Genius

(1867-1930)

Background paper for


Budapest: The Golden Years

Early Twentieth Century Mathematics Education in Budapest and Lessons for Today
von Neumann Memorial Lectures,

Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies,

Princeton University
October 5, 2007
Supported by a grant from the John Templeton Foundation


Contents
Abstract 4

I The Secret of Survival: An Introduction 6

Problem Solving in Hungarian History 6

“The Lands Between:” The Setting 10

Hungarian Creativity: A Social History 16



II The Chemistry of Budapest 20
The Making of a Capital 21

Fathers and Sons: Family Background 23

Toward Assimilation 25

Religious Conversion 28

Hungary and the German Cultural Tradition 31

The Act of Creation 36



III Schooling 40
Importing the Gymnasium 40

The Mintagimnázium 42

The Lutheran Gimnázium 45

Markó utca 48

The Formative Years of Mathematics Education 49

The University of Hungary 52

Fascination with Genius 54



IV Berlin Junction 56
The Human Geography of Interwar Migrations 56

From Budapest to Berlin 58

The Amerikanisierung of Berlin 64

The Babel of the World 68

V Transferring the Heuristic Tradition: George Pólya 71

The Rise of the Jewish Middle Class: Culture, Prestige, Mathematics 72

Problem Solving in Mathematics 76

The Stanford Mathematics Competition 79


Conclusion 81

Notes 85

Bibliography 103

Abstract

Commissioned by the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies (Princeton, NJ) and the John Templeton Foundation (West Conshohocken, PA), the intention of this paper is to provide a broader background—historical, social, intellectual, and cultural—to understanding the admirable creativity in early 20th century Hungary, with the mathematician and scientist John von Neumann (1903-1957) in center focus.

As a starting point to a Princeton conference on John von Neumann, this text discusses many impulses influencing the making of this great mind, presenting him by way of prosopography, as a vision of his generation rather than just of his own personal biography. Nevertheless, the essay still focuses in many ways on John von Neumann—his birthplace, his national, social, religious and family background, his contradictory Judaism and conversion, his schooling, his early career in Hungary and Germany, his musical interest, his exile, and, yes, his genius. Readers of this paper should also look upon the chapters, connected by and through the unique mind and personality of von Neumann, as comments on his life and times as well as those of his brilliant Budapest contemporaries. An effort has been made to approach the thoughts and ideas, as well as the atmosphere and intellectual aura of von Neumann and his generation, the survivors of which the present author knew as a young man, and intimately well.

In an effort to identify the conditions of “Hungarian genius,” particularly, though not exclusively, in the case of a mathematician and scientist such as von Neumann, one may come to the following propositions:

1. Hungarian history witnessed innovation as a survival strategy, both for individuals and for the nation as a whole.  A nation often on the defensive, surrounded by potential invaders, had to be inventive in order to survive, and this inventiveness was also evidenced in the Hungarian intellectual world, gradually overturning a conservative emphasis on authoritarian control, conformity and rote learning.

2.  Because of the traditionally elitist nature of Hungarian (and Central European) education, universities could absorb only a fragment of the available research talent, and some of this talent found its place in high schools. Moreover, as the very definition of the teaching occupation included original research, gifted students of the best schools encountered brilliant researchers at a much earlier age than in the U.S.


3.  As of the late 19th century, feudal privilege started to decline, hereditary prerogatives came under attack, and occupational status gradually evolved as a source of prestige. This was a particularly welcome opportunity for the transformation of a variety of marginal ethnic, social, and religious groups that never had access to hereditary privilege, and this encouraged the infusion of Jews into the world of learning – in exchange, as it were, for their growing willingness to assimilate into the Magyar nation. The fact that the state wished to increase the number of people self-identified as Hungarians in this multiethnic country, opened doors that were closed elsewhere, at least for a time. Previously excluded groups could flood into these vocational domains and make a mark for themselves.

4.  The rapidly developing economy of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy fostered a premium on the development of technology, mathematics, medicine, science and finance, whereas, conservative control was often exercised over humanities and the arts, both viewed as being more political.
5. The newly established (1873) capital city of Budapest played an outstanding role in generating new, modern culture, and spreading an innovative spirit in and out of the country. Budapest developed as a center of culture and learning, and by the beginning of the 20th century, a special social and intellectual chemistry there resulted in especially creative and productive thinking, with Mathematics and music the best examples of this “Budapest chemistry.”

6.  Intellectual, artistic, and musical talent acquired high prestige. A cultural premium on the idea of competitive knowledge poured into education. Practices like competitions and specialized journals for high school students designed to surface unusual abilities, led to a celebration of gifted students, providing a different kind of prestige than occupational status alone.  A cultural emphasis on modernism paved the way to an increasing internationalization, mainly in the best schools of fin-de-siècle Budapest that prized experimentation, inductive reasoning, pattern-breaking innovation, less formal relations between teacher and student, and personalized education. 


7. Culture transfer, mostly from Germany, helped shape Hungarian arts and sciences at the highest level of European education. The influence of the German school system, of German art, music and science, directly benefited Hungary and had a major impact on teaching, learning and research. Much of the result was later exported once again by eminent exiles— from Hungary back to Germany, and then from Germany to the United States.
8. The period of 1918-1920 marked the end of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy and historical Hungary within it, creating a vastly different period in national history, and with some of the best minds, most of them Jewish mathematicians, scientists and musicians, compelled to leave the country. Despite profoundly different political conditions that followed, some of the great traditions of education, particularly science and mathematics education have survived until today.


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