The ‘Courant Hilton’: building the mathematical sciences at New York University

Brit Shields
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Abstract

This essay explores how mid-twentieth-century mathematicians at New York University envisioned their discipline, cultural identities and social roles, and how these self-constructed identities materialized in the planning of their new academic building, Warren Weaver Hall. These mathematicians considered their research to be a ‘living part of the stream of science’, requiring a mathematics research library which they equated to a scientific laboratory and a complex of computing rooms which served as an interdisciplinary research centre. Identifying as ‘scientists’, they understood their societal value to be that of researchers, outputting mathematics research valuable to the natural sciences, the emerging field of computer science and the United States government and military, as well as educators. When the building opened in 1965, it was touted by the university administration as an ‘example of excellence’; it later, in 1970, became the site of heated negotiations when university student and faculty protestors staged a sit-in rebuking the Atomic Energy Commission's Computing Center housed on the second floor. A close study of the correspondence between the mathematicians and their peers in the university's administration, private foundations, government agencies and an architectural firm not only illuminates the day-to-day work practices of this eminent group of mathematicians, but also sheds light on their own self-constructed academic and social identities within their contemporaneous Cold War culture.

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库兰特希尔顿":在纽约大学建立数学科学体系
这篇文章探讨了二十世纪中期纽约大学的数学家如何设想他们的学科、文化身份和社会角色,以及这些自我建构的身份如何在他们的新教学楼沃伦-韦弗厅的规划中具体化。这些数学家认为,他们的研究是 "科学源流的一部分",因此需要一个数学研究图书馆(他们将其等同于科学实验室)和一个计算机房群,作为跨学科研究中心。作为 "科学家",他们将自己的社会价值理解为研究人员,为自然科学、新兴的计算机科学领域、美国政府和军队以及教育工作者提供有价值的数学研究成果。1965 年大楼启用时,大学管理部门将其视为 "卓越的典范";后来,1970 年,大学师生抗议者静坐示威,斥责设在二楼的原子能委员会计算中心,引发了激烈的谈判。通过仔细研究数学家与大学行政部门、私人基金会、政府机构和建筑公司的同行之间的通信,不仅可以了解这群杰出数学家的日常工作实践,还可以了解他们在同时代的冷战文化中自我构建的学术和社会身份。
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