# #Mon Aug 09 12:02:04 CEST 2010 Text__J8MHUKOdEd-WfYQ0GneCwQ_text=

Born near Hamburg the son of a bank director, Hermann Weyl (1885\u20131955) studies mathematics in G\u00F6ttingen, receives his doctorate there, is promoted to professor and is regarded to be the most distinguished student of David Hilbert. In 1913, Weyl receives a professorship at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (Eidgen\u00F6ssiches Technisches Institut) in Zurich; in 1930 he succeeds Hilbert in G\u00F6ttingen, emigrates from Germany in 1933 and receives a position at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.

Weyl\u2019s wide-ranging mathematical works can be separated into three main categories\: Problems of pure mathematical nature in the spirit of Hilbert\u2019s school, number theory and mathematical physics. In 1918 he publishes Space-Time-Matter, one of the first books about the general theory of relativity. His book Group Theory and Quantum Mechanics from 1928 is probably his most influential contribution to modern physics. He is also concerned with the philosophical problems of mathematics and mathematical physics.

Text__J8MHUKOdEd-WfYQ0GneCwQ_title=Hermann Weyl (1885\u20131955)