[HN Gopher] The Mathematical Center of the Universe (1807-1933)
___________________________________________________________________
The Mathematical Center of the Universe (1807-1933)
Author : jorgenveisdal
Score : 58 points
Date : 2023-01-30 07:24 UTC (15 hours ago)
(HTM) web link (www.privatdozent.co)
(TXT) w3m dump (www.privatdozent.co)
| killjoywashere wrote:
| If you want a deep dive on Gottingen, Constance Reid's biography
| of Hilbert is great.
|
| Fun fact: Hilbert was born in Konigsberg, a port city on the
| Baltic with a famous set of 7 bridges, and as part of the WWII
| peace settlement between the allies, Russia got it. But not
| without some interest stipulations.
|
| Konigsberg is now Kaliningrad, in the Kaliningrad Oblast, a
| geographically separated province of Russia. In order for Russia
| to regain direct access to the Kalingrad port (Konigsberg),
| Russia would have to invade either Lithuania or Poland. And if
| you look at the borders, it's pretty clear they were designed as
| a lock: a straight shot from the nearest point in Russia would go
| through Lithuania, then Poland, and Lithuania again.
|
| https://www.amazon.com/Hilbert-Constance-Reid/dp/0387946748/
| tmathmeyer wrote:
| I think you've misremembered geography here - a straight line
| from "mainland" Russia to Kaliningrad cuts through Lithuania
| and Latvia, and to involve Poland here, you'd have to be
| drawing a line from Belarus. Additionally, when Kaliningrad was
| handed over to the Soviets, it was contiguous as part of the
| USSR. There was no "design" to make the Russians upset about
| it.
|
| Map: https://imgur.com/a/xtBJAig
| Ralfp wrote:
| 1992 Russia offered Kaliningrad to both Poland and Lithuania,
| but neither country was interested in a region with seriously
| underdeveloped economy and inhabited by Russians who wouldn't
| feel either Polish or Lithuanian, nor would they speak the
| language.
|
| > And if you look at the borders, it's pretty clear they were
| designed as a lock
|
| Assuming you speak about Suwalki Corridor, those borders
| reflect pre-war borders of local counties. No mastermind
| planning to make it hard for Russia to make it from Belarus to
| Kaliningrad. In fact it was Russia who drove those lines in
| first place after WW2.
|
| Only ,,problem" Russia would have to solve in eventual
| aggression is getting an army into Belarus. But they can just
| target the Baltics instead and strike from their own territory.
| georgecmu wrote:
| _1992 Russia offered Kaliningrad to both Poland and
| Lithuania, but neither country was interested in a region
| with seriously underdeveloped economy and inhabited by
| Russians who wouldn't feel either Polish or Lithuanian, nor
| would they speak the language._
|
| Interesting -- I haven't heard about this. Do you know where
| I can find out more about this offer?
|
| I have spent some time in the summers of 1993-1995 in
| Lithuania near the border with Kaliningrad on the Curonian
| spit. I believe the Russian fleet was still based in Klaipeda
| in 1994.
| [deleted]
| glass3 wrote:
| There was also a talk in 1920 about universal computation 16
| years before Turing:
|
| https://writings.stephenwolfram.com/2020/12/where-did-combin...
| wslh wrote:
| Impressive research! I have an story that is related to this
| kind of history research and genealogy but not with math. My
| great-great-grandfather was born in Gornostaypol [1], before
| the XX century. He came to Argentina with some of his children
| and my grandfather. Beyond my family and Internet genealogy
| will be very difficult to get information (without going to
| Ukraine...) and who can remember him or something about my
| family in 2023 in a village with minimum population? The Google
| search is more complex also because his surname was "men".
|
| So... a post appeared in July 13, 2022 talking about my great-
| great-grandfather from the memories of a women who was born in
| 1938 [2]. Those are amazing things such as searching a needle
| in a haystack. Randomness helps.
|
| [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hornostaipil
|
| [2] https://jewua.org/gornostaypol/
| kensai wrote:
| What a great time to live and do maths in Gottingen.
| Haga wrote:
| [dead]
___________________________________________________________________
(page generated 2023-01-30 23:00 UTC)