When you read articles or books on the history of physics you always find some passage that mentions the name von Neumann. This man, John von Neumann, appears to be on another level and probably is the person you have in mind when someone says "oh, he's an Einstein!"1. For more on his life and work, see the MacTutor biography and the Institute for Advanced Study page. So I spent the last hour reading up on him and just want to quickly capture what this guy was able to do.
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| Figure 1. John von Neumann (public domain) |
Childhood
He was born in 1903 in Budapest, Hungary; all his family details are there as well, very interesting. At an early age it was clear he was a prodigy. He could divide 8-digit numbers in his head and memorize books by age 6, then by age 8 he was fluent in ancient Greek. He was a sponge for knowledge, and because his parents were wealthy they always had tutors to aid his talents. His profile says that by age 10 he was doing college level math and basically was a genius.
College
I don't know much about the universities in Hungary, but at age 17 he goes to study at the University of Budapest and then continues on at universities in Berlin and Zurich. He gets his PhD in mathematics at 22 and then also gets a degree in engineering because he can. Then he starts to work in areas of quantum mechanics and basically provides the mathematical foundations for what Heisenberg and Schrödinger had proposed; he makes QM a rigorous theory [1]. Okay, he is 23 now and just getting started.
Out in the wild
Gets interested in mathematical models of strategy and invents the new field of game theory. He proves the minimax theorem [2], a fundamental result that shows how to make optimal decisions when opponents are trying to beat you. Turns out that things like poker, war, economics, all the same math. With Oskar Morgenstern he later writes the book that launches the field [3]. Von Neumann publishes it casually.
Gets invited to America to work at the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) in Princeton. Becomes the youngest professor at IAS. Has a nice neighbor called Albert Einstein who is considered the smartest person alive but I'd wager von Neumann in raw brain-compute is superior, as many who knew both seem to have indicated.
John von Neumann becomes the man that people bring their unsolved problem to, the one they have been working on for months. He then proceeds to solve it while they are still explaining the problem and what they have tried. He was the kind of guy who would be completing their proofs before they finished describing the paper they were working on. Mathematicians start collecting "von Neumann stories" and everyone has one; a legend is born and he keeps pumping out impactful content.
Starts to work on ergodic theory, operator theory, and lattice theory. Publishes dozens of foundational papers that would be a career for a normal person in my view. But for von Neumann it's just another working day at IAS.
Interestingly he was not like our Prof. Dirac, not a hermit; he was known for his social skills and ability to party. He is a legend in many ways. Also known for liking to drink and tell impolite jokes, not a good driver, and many car crashes. Everyone, even the best, has flaws. In general von Neumann is a liked man.
The war years
John von Neumann becomes a U.S. citizen and then, as one would expect given his intellect and the looming threat of war, is recruited to join the Manhattan Project. He helps design the implosion mechanism for the atomic bomb and calculates the explosive lenses needed. His math helps build Fat Man, the bomb that destroys Nagasaki. Not sure how this made von Neumann feel or how he thought about the devastation of the bomb.
He continues with work on the hydrogen bomb, which turns out to be even more destructive. You see it just as math. He decides computing and computers are going to be the future and works on the ENIAC and EDVAC computers. He writes the "First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC" [4], which describes the von Neumann architecture that is still used in computers today. Every computer since uses this architecture. Basically von Neumann invented the modern design for every laptop, phone, server, etc. that exists today. Thank you Prof. von Neumann.
Post-war years
He starts to think about self-replicating machines and cellular automata [5]. Basically the precursor of Conway's Game of Life and cellular automata. He starts to think about the future and predicts nanotechnology and AI decades early.
Surprisingly, in his early fifties he is diagnosed with bone cancer, probably from radiation exposure at nuclear tests. He dies at 53. So what did he achieve in only 53 years?
- Quantum mechanics foundations
- Game theory
- Von Neumann architecture (i.e., computers)
- cellular automata
- Nuclear power
- Theories in economics, meteorology, biology
From reading about von Neumann: things like Einstein had deeper intuition and Gödel had purer logic, but nobody was faster than von Neumann. The smartest people of the 20th century clearly saw him as uniquely different.
Footnotes
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There's no doubt Einstein was a very brilliant thinker and one of a kind, but he probably was so influential for his creative and abstract thought rather than his strong foundational knowledge and analytical ability, although he obviously is at the top of the distribution for that as well. ↩
References