Original Source
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HERMAN GOLDSTINE
(with ALBERT TUCKER)
This is an interview of Herman Goldstine at his home in Princeton, New Jersey,
on 22 March 1985, The interviewers are Albert Tucker and Frederik Nebeker.
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Nebeker: Perhaps we could begin, Professor Goldstine, by asking you about
Oswald Veblen.
Tucker: I think that you got to know both Veblen and von Neumann before you
came to Princeton.
Goldstine: Yes, that's true. I really got to know Veblen through G.A. Bliss in
Chicago. How, exactly, or on what visit Veblen came to Chicago, I don't
remember, but I met him. I know that I got notification to go into the Army in
July something of 1942, and I was sent to the Air Force in Stockton,
California. Bliss got in touch with Veblen who was then the chief scientist at
Aberdeen Proving Ground. Veblen had been in the first war-he was a major in
the first war, and a civilian in the second war-and he started the wheels
moving. It was touch-and-go whether I would go overseas or Veblen would get
there first, but he got there first, and I received orders to leave Stockton.
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Well, in fact I got orders to leave Stockton from the Adjutant General, and
simultaneously I got orders from the local post to proceed to
I've-forgotten-where on the way to Japan or some eastern place. I called the
commanding general, and he said, "Which do you want to do? " I said, "I want
to take the Aberdeen post." And he said, "Well, the orders from the Adjutant
General in Washington obviously take precedence over the orders from a post
adjutant in some fort in Stockton, California." "Son" he said, " if I were
you, I would get out of the camp, if you've got an auto," he said, "I'd get in
the auto, and start driving. Let the paper work catch up later on, because
otherwise you'll just have an impossible time." So I got in the car and drove
east, and Veblen assigned me to work for Albert Bennett. Do you remember
Albert Bennett?
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Tucker: Oh, yes.
Goldstine: So that was my first real day-to-day encounter with Veblen.
Nebeker: And Veblen knew about you through Bliss?
Goldstine: Yes. At that point I was the research assistant-I think that was
the title-to Bliss, who was the chairman of the math department at Chicago.
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Tucker: But you'd done your Ph.D. with Lawrence Graves, hadn't you?
Goldstine: Yes, but Bliss liked me and asked me if I would be his assistant.
So that's how that went. My thesis subject was the calculus of variations in
abstract spaces, so it fitted Graves's abstract spaces and Bliss's calculus of
variations.
Nebeker: So you worked with Bliss even on the Ph.D.?
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Goldstine: No, I didn't work with anybody. Graves was my thesis advisor, but
he was away the year I wrote my thesis. And Bliss-I didn't even know that
Bliss had any interest in it, but he was following it for some reason.
At any rate, that's how I got to know Veblen. From time to time I was very
impatient of Albert Bennett, who was a nice old gentleman-in those days I
guess he was a major at Aberdeen-but he was a very precise, methodical,
plodding person who drove me up the wall. I'm sure he must have driven
generations of other people up the wall, too, at Brown [laughter]. So I kept
doing whatever I felt had to be done, and once in a while Veblen would call me
in, and in a very nice way he would say to me, "Try to be nicer to Bennett, if
you can." But Veblen became a very close friend, and it was just the other
night-we're moving, and we were cleaning out stuff upstairs-I was throwing
away letters from Elizabeth and Oswald from trips when they would go overseas
and write us notes. He was a very nice old gentleman.
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Tucker: Someone else who is a very good friend of mine that you knew at that
time was Sergeant Douglas.
Goldstine: Yes, when I was at Aberdeen, I had the good fortune to have
associated with me Ed Douglas. He was ...
Tucker: Mother Superior of the enlisted crew.
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Goldstine: Right. I guess he taught mathematics and eventually became
headmaster at the ...
Tucker: No, he became headmaster, but that was only in an interim period. He
was acting headmaster at Taft.
Goldstine: I see. He was just a marvelous guy. In the Army you can't really
get anything done unless you know a sergeant. And this sergeant was sort of
like a Father Confessor to all the enlisted men at the Ballistic Research
Laboratory. If you needed sheets or pillowcases or blankets or another field
jacket or heaven-knows-what, Sergeant Douglas could always produce it for you.
In fact, that was a very superior group. Another man who was there from
Princeton was Martin Schwarzschild. He was in the laboratory, and he is a
superior person.
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Tucker: And then you had some very promising young mathematicians there as
enlisted men, who didn't observe Army protocol [laughter].
Goldstine: It was a wild and woolly group. It was a very nice group of people.
I guess that during the first war there was a fun group, too. There were a few
officers like Everett Pitcher. I got a note from Everett the other day. But,
anyway, it was my great good luck that Bennett's boss was a man named Paul
Gillon. He was a regular Army officer. And Gillon took me to Philadelphia very
soon after I got to Aberdeen to look over a substation which the Ballistic
Research Laboratory was running at the Moore School at the University of
Pennsylvania. We went there and it turned out that the thing was terribly run.
It was just a shambles. They were trying to train people to be what in those
days were called computers. That was the word for a human being and not a
machine. A computer in those days was a human who sat at a desk calculator and
pounded out numbers. Also, the BRL rented from the University something that
was called a differential analyzer, which is a big analog computer. It was a
sister machine to the analog computer at Aberdeen. The whole operation was
being done badly, and Gillon said to me, "Herman, why don't you come up here
and be in charge?" And I said, "That's great." So for the balance of the war I
was nominally at Aberdeen, but in fact was mostly at the University of
Pennsylvania.
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Let's go back for a minute. I guess one of Veblen's greatest mathematical
accomplishments was finding Johnny von Neumann and bringing him to Princeton
University. At least I suppose that was his greatest achievement among many
achievements.
Nebeker: In your book on the history of computers you pay tribute to Veblen in
administering the Institute and attracting people there.
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Tucker: But it was earlier on that he brought von Neumann, and at the same
time Wigner. They filled one position between them.
Goldstine: That's true. I think all of Veblen's life he was a natural
administrator and leader.
Tucker: But he always did this by indirection.
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Goldstine: Well, right, he did [laughter], but, by God, he did it. He did it.
He was the kind of guy who would keep dripping water on the stone until
finally it eroded. If it didn't happen otherwise, he just kept at it, and at
it, and at it.
Tucker: I've always thought of him as a mathematical analog of a political
boss, the old-fashioned hemming and hawing type of thing.
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Goldstine: I think that's probably true. I don't really know much about how
you'd rate these people. At Chicago, there was a man who was the founding
chairman of the math department named E. H. Moore. Moore had a lot of
students, but three that I can think of at this moment are Veblen, G.D.
Birkhoff, and G.A. Bliss. Of the three, Birkhoff we can dismiss, since he
really doesn't come into the picture, but Bliss and Veblen were two of that
group.
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I've never quite understood how well Veblen did as, a mathematician. He
obviously was a prominent mathematician, and I suppose he was the most
prominent in the sense of moving American mathematics to the forefront. That's
my personal appraisal of it. Of course Al knows all about these things more
than I do, I have them sort of partly from Veblen's view, and that may not be
unbiased. For example, his description of how he got Fine Hall built. Then
I've had Jim Alexander's story about what a pest Veblen was in building Fuld
Hall at the Institute. Because every little door knob, every little gargoyle,
every little piece of stained glass that has a word on it, was something that
Veblen personally supervised. Alexander cared very little about any of this
stuff, and Veblen was constantly involving Alexander, or trying to involve him
in these things.
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Tucker: Well, Alexander's mother actually had some interest in interior
decoration, and she is credited with having selected most of the furnishings
for Fine Hall.
Goldstine: I see, so that's how come poor Jim got cursed with all of this
business.
Nebeker: I was wondering if you could analyze this leadership role that Veblen
played. One thing you mentioned was his attracting the best people he could to
Princeton. What other things would you mention?
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Goldstine: Well, when I was at Aberdeen, he was competing with the Los Alamos
people for mathematicians, physicists, chemists, engineers, you name it. There
was an old boy network out there. He knew the chairman of every mathematics
department, and probably the physics chairman, and maybe the chemistry
chairman, etc., at all the major schools. I think that was very important. To
Aberdeen he brought Jimmy McShane, he brought John Kelley, he brought Chuck
Morrey, he brought Tony Morse. And he brought L.H. Thomas, the physicist; Ted
Sterne, an astrophysicist; Leland Cunningham, an astronomer; Dorrit Hoffleit,
an astronomer-well, we could probably sit here and go through a list. I guess
he brought Everett Pitcher. He brought a whole scad of people, and he did this
by his going to friends and saying, "Who do you think's available, and who
would be good?"
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Nebeker: Was he also stimulating to the mathematicians there working under
him?
Goldstine: Yes. He was a warm, lovely human being.
Tucker: But he didn't try to annex people, in the way, for example, Marston
Morse did. He was interested in the man doing his stuff.
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Goldstine: No, he was not like Marston at all. Veblen was married to an
English woman, and he tried awfully hard to be an Englishman. I think it would
have been a great ambition of his, if it were possible, to become an
Englishman. But he had that kind of business of being very nice, but standing
off. Now Marston Morse and Richard Courant were examples of guys who pushed in
different ways on people. I think that's fair, and they wouldn't let you
alone. But Veblen believed in people and not in what they were working on. I
think Morse, for example, is more interested in the problem than the person,
and I think Veblen was more interested in people than in the particular
mathematical thing.
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Tucker: That's right. A moment ago you said you didn't know quite where Veblen
stood in mathematics. Now just recently I saw an interview that was done by
one of the mathematics magazines, the one that's called the College
Mathematics Journal, an interview of H.S.M. Coxeter. At one point Cpxeter is
asked, "Who are the great mathematicians?" He starts with Archimedes and
Apollonios-not Euclid because Euclid just organized what already existed. Then
he went on and made mention of more modern days: Gauss, Lobachevski, and
Veblen. That's pretty high praise.
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Goldstine: I think that's putting him much higher than I would have put him. I
liked him and I admired him, but I certainly would never mention him in the
same paragraph with Gauss, but there's hardly anybody that I would.
Tucker: Of course Gauss was much more than a geometer. Geometry was just
incidental, so to speak, to his research, but it was the whole thing as far as
Veblen was concerned. Veblen was actually trying, at the time that I was a
graduate student here, to come up with a definition of what a geometry is,
somewhat in the way Felix Klein had done in the Erlangen Programme. He finally
came to the conclusion that anything that he could not draw any distinction
between the things that he wanted to call geometry and the rest of
mathematics.
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Goldstine: Yes, that's very interesting.
Tucker: He said that one would have to say that something was geometry if
there were experts with acknowledged taste who said it was geometry.
So he started off with E.H. Moore; his doctoral thesis was on postulates for
plane Euclidean geometry. He went on from that to projective geometry, because
he felt that Euclidean geometry and the non-Euclidean geometries could all be
regarded as specializations of projective geometry. So if you wanted to really
get to the foundational roots of geometry it was Hilbert. Then around 1920,
when Einstein's general relativity came out, he immediately started in on
differential geometry, but not like Eisenhart. Veblen was trying to get to
foundations of differential geometry. In between, of course, he had gotten
interested, working with his student James Alexander, in analysis situs. He
sort of ran the gamut of geometry, so if anybody could come up with a
definition about 1930 it was Veblen. Well, Coxeter was a post-doctoral fellow
here at about that time, and I sure think he's a pretty good geometer, but he
takes off his hat to Oswald.
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Goldstine: Well, I think the nicest part about Veblen in this respect is that
however great a mathematician he was--and he, certainly was a great
mathematician-he recognized greatness in mathematicians and in scientists, and
as far as I know he had no envy for people who were greater than he. And
that's not trivial. He delighted in Johnny von Neumann, for example. I think
in a sense he viewed Johnny as his intellectual child, almost. He and Johnny
always talked-I mean Veblen would be in and out a lot-but never about
mathematics. Always about some political thing at the Institute, or
administrative problem, or world problem.
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There was a time he was talking with me about the idea of a national institute
for advanced study and things like that. He was always concerned about the
good of science in America, and furthering it. But as I say, I think the fact
that he could take somebody like Johnny or people at Aberdeen or wherever and
view them with perfect equanimity, even though they were as good or better
than he, is a mark of a considerable person. I think you'd find it hard to say
that Marston would view a superior person with ease. In fact, that put
Marston's hackles right up, the way when two male dogs approach each other.
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Tucker: Pretty much the same was true of Birkhoff.
Goldstine: Of Birkhoff, too, of course.
Tucker: But not of Bliss.
Goldstine: Not of Bliss, no. Both he and Veblen had this very gentlemanly
quality of just treating people the way they were. That was a remarkable
quality both of them had. At any rate, I liked and admired both of them very
much. I don't know two men that I really liked, respected, and admired so
much, and who were so nice to me as those two men.
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Tucker: When did you first encounter Johnny?
Goldstine: I first met Johnny in the pre-war days. There was a conference on
modern integration theory at Ann Arbor, Michigan. For some reason the American
Mathematical Society asked me to be rapporteur for the conference. The
speakers included Wiener, von Neumann, and a variety of other people. But of
all the people the one who really impressed me was von Neumann. The one that
least impressed me was Wiener. Wiener gave one of those papers that he could
give where everything was totally disorganized. He was muddled. He was a great
person. For the purposes of this record let me say that I wrote a book review
of his collected works, and I thought they were fantastic. I just think he was
one of the really great people. But boy, when he got up and gave an unprepared
lecture, it really stank, and that was a stinky lecture.
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Whether von Neumann's was prepared or not I have no idea, but it was just the
way von Neumann did all his lectures. It was just like being out on glass, it
was so smooth. You never heard him lecture. Well, his lectures were totally
different from his printed articles. The printed articles tend to be very
Germanic, long, hard German sentences; not very insightful papers. But when he
would get up and speak about the topic, he somehow knew exactly how to get you
through the forest. Whenever he gave a lecture, it was so lucid, that you
wouldn't sit there and take notes because it was like magic, it all seemed so
simple you didn't need to take notes. Then afterwards when you got home and
thought about the subject, you realized that you didn't know at all what the
trail was through the trees.
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I could tell you a story about this and it's true. I guess I had better not
mention the man's name. One time when von Neumann was available for people to
come and discuss their problems-this was his wont-this chap came to see him.
He was a temporary member at the Institute. He came to see Johnny because he,
couldn't prove a certain theorem. Von Neumann said, "Well, this is how you
prove it." And he went up to the blackboard and away it went. This guy sat
there, watched the whole performance, thanked von Neumann profusely, and left.
That was, say, on Wednesday, and on Saturday night the von Neumanns had a big
bash, which was fairly customary. This guy came over to von Neumann and said,
"Excuse me, but you know that proof you made the other day? I neglected to
write it down, and I just don't understand how it goes. Would you mind telling
me again?" So von Neumann rattled the thing off for him again, with a highball
glass in his hand. As the fellow walked away, von Neumann said to me, "That
son of a bitch, that he had the nerve to make me twice give the proof, and
he's not going to give me even a footnote reference in the paper. The proof is
going to be put down as his proof. That's the way people are." That was sort
of typical.
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At any rate, von Neumann was extraordinarily lucid. He was in no way like
Veblen. Veblen and Bliss were both, I suppose, the best American types that
you could find. And von Neumann represented a very sophisticated Central
European culture. People came from far and wide to tell Johnny stories, mostly
dirty jokes. I can't conceive of anybody going up and telling either Bliss or
Veblen a dirty joke. In fact, I don't think they had much capacity for jokes.
I mean, that wasn't their thing. But von Neumann was amused. He had a kind of
a chameleon-like quality, to adapt to the people he was with. If they were
very dignified and if it was going to be a full-dress affair, with everybody
on their dignity, he would be on his dignity, and there would be no nonsense
about it. He could be the Herr Geheimrat just the same as anybody else. But
left to his own devices, he was more like Abe Lincoln, who would suddenly say,
"Well, that reminds me of a story," and then would tell you the story. You'd
proceed along, and then the discussion would be broken up by these stories.
..
Whenever you'd go into his office, having spent the last week working on
something, and say, "Johnny, I've got an idea," and start to write, you'd get
maybe the first half-a-line down before he'd say, "Yes, let me have the
chalk." Then he'd get up there, and for the rest of the hour he would be
putting it down in the way it ought to be done.
I was trying to compare him to Fermi. Fermi had an intensity. They were both
extraordinary virtuosi in their fields. They were probably the fastest guys on
their feet that I've ever met, each in his own field. But Fermi was incredibly
intense. When Fermi worked at something, he worked at it. Fermi became
friendly and affable, and he was a charming, lovely person. But when he was
focusing on the thing he was interested in, that was everything. Whereas
Johnny had no problem with putting up with any number of shennanigans on the
side while the main problem was going forward.
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I remember when, at some point, Fermi suddenly got interested in computers. He
called me to Chicago and sat me down at the end of a table. He sat at the
other end, and a man named Sam Allison, who was a physicist at Chicago, sat in
the middle. He sat for a couple of hours and did nothing but grill me about
the computer, in every possible aspect. No break whatsoever, no levity,
nothing. It was just the kind of an examination that you could imagine might
take place in the basement of a police station somewhere, you know, when you'd
been caught doing something ghastly. And at the end of that, he understood
everything and was all conversational and chatty and pleasant. But I never
really saw Johnny, hardly, when it wasn't possible for him to smile and relax,
and that didn't seem to stop his flow of thought.
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Nebeker: Could I ask about von Neumann's work habits? Was he in his office all
day long, for example?
Goldstine: His work habits were very methodical. He would get up in the
morning, and go to the Nassau Club to have breakfast. And then from the Nassau
Club he'd come to the Institute around nine, nine-thirty, work until lunch,
have lunch, and then work until, say, five, and then go on home. Many evenings
he would entertain. Usually a few of us, maybe my wife and me. We would just
sit around, and he might not even sit in the same room. He had a little study
that opened off of the living room, and he would just sit in there sometimes.
He would listen, and if something interested him, he would interrupt.
Otherwise he would work away.
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At night he would go to bed at a reasonable hour, and he would waken, I think,
almost every night, judging from the things he told me and the few times that
he and I shared hotel rooms. He would waken in the night, two, three in the
morning, and would have thought through what he had been working on. He would
then write. He would write down the things he had worked on. I think I
recounted in that book the nice story that he told me about the G”del theorem.
He, under Hilbert's tutelage, was trying to prove the opposite of the G”del
theorem. He worked and worked and worked at this, and one night he dreamed the
proof. He got up and wrote it down, and he got very close to the end. He went
and worked all day on that part, and the next night he dreamed again. He
dreamed how to close the gap, and he got up and wrote, and he got within
epsilon of the end, but he couldn't make the final step. So he went to bed.
The next day he worked and worked and worked at it, and he said to me, "You
know, it was very lucky, Herman, that I didn't dream the third night, or think
what a state mathematics would be in today." [Laughter.]
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So those were his work habits. He was a very methodical worker. Everytime he
thought about something, he wrote it down in great detail. There was nothing
rough or unpolished. Everything got written down either in the form of a
letter or a memorandum.
Tucker: I've looked at his files at the time that A. Taub was editing the
collected works and just saw the raw material. It was essentially a diary,
except that it was kept in a filing cabinet. Everything was filed by date, not
by subject matter.
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Goldstine: Yes, that's right. He was very methodical, but he was not only
methodical about these things, he also had all kinds of instincts. I remember
one time he gave me a paper that he pulled out of that filing cabinet. He
said, "I wonder, Herman, if you'd take this and read it for me. I've kept this
here for a long time and I've never quite known whether to publish it or not."
So I took it home and read it, and I found something I thought was wrong. So I
waited a few days and read it again and again. I really felt it was wrong, so
I brought it in and showed him the mistake and he said, "Damn it, of course.
There is some instinct that kept me from publishing that paper and it must
have been a realizalion that it had a mistake somewhere in it, but I just
never knew where it was."
..
He could give lectures on material that he hadn't seen in 20 years. He
originally wrote this material in German, and he was up there at the
blackboard at the Institute giving this lecture. I was sitting in the back
with the German text just for fun. He was translating, because word for word,
symbol for symbol. He used exactly the stuff that was in those papers. So he
had a remarkable filing system in his own noodle.
He had another quality which I always thought was unbelievable. He and I
worked at trying to prove something about bounds on eigenvalues one time
without any success. One day I saw in Math Reviews a statement that Kolmogorov
or somebody had proved a theorem, and I said, "This is what so and so proved."
He said, "Sure, this is how it goes. And he went to the blackboard and he
proved it. Somehow, just knowing that it was true, and not just a conjecture
of ours, made it possible for him to see the proof. I don't know how or why or
what.
..
I watched him reading a math paper. He would read it like this, just the way
you might read a mystery story, page by page. At just about the time you could
run your eye down the page, he would be turning it. And at the end of it he
had it. I always remember one time, Bochner, von Neumann, and I were in a
room, I guess Johnny's room in the Institute. Bochner was presenting material
to us, and he got stuck. He hemmed and hawed for a while, and he said "If
you'll wait a minute, I know where the book is that has the proof of this.
I'll run upstairs and get it." Johnny said, "Don't do that, I don't know what
book it's in, but I'll prove it for you." And he did.
..
So he had a remarkable mind, a really remarkable mind. He was very different
guy from Wigner, who was another extraordinarily talented man. But Johnny and
Wigner were really different. I guess they both must have been absolute holy
terrors. There were three of them. There was von Neumann, Wigner, and Teller.
The three of them went to school together essentially from kindergarten right
on in Budapest. Once Johnny told me that Wigner and he used to team up against
Teller. And I suspect-this is my own theory-that Teller's attitude toward the
world, his general hatred of everything, is due to the fact that he was
repressed constantly by two guys who were brighter than he was [laughter].
..
He is a very bright man, Teller, but to be opposed by two men of such
formidable brilliance as those two guys must have been impossible. That goes
back to this thing that we were talking about, about Veblen being happy to
deal with people who were brighter than he. I don't think Johnny suffered
brilliant people easily. I think he got contentious, and I think he didn't
handle that one as well as Veblen would.
Tucker: He could get rather irritated when he felt someone was challenging
him.
..
Goldstine: Yes, that's right. Absolutely.
Tucker: I remember two of my students, who were working in game theory, went
to him to tell him about things that they were working on. In particular
Harold Kuhn thought that he had found a counterexample to one of the results
that's in the paper on the expanding economy that von Neumann did in 1937.
Johnny actually got angry, and I really think that he was thinking very fast
to get himself out of it. The example that Harold Kuhn had come up with was
one in which the coefficient of expansion-the theorem was that every expanding
economy had a coefficient of expansion which was a real number-was infinity.
But Johnny immediately said that, well, at the time he wrote this he was under
the influence of Hahn who regarded plus infinity and minus infinity as real
numbers to make the whole system compact. So that anyone knew that plus
infinity was a real number [laughter]. It seems to me that if that was the
view you were taking you would at least put in a footnote to say so.
..
Goldstine: Well, Johnny was not like Veblen in this sense. He didn't have that
same attitude. He had hatreds or dislikes for people. He had a lot of dislike
for Wiener. Wiener was a pain to him, and of course Wiener was a pain to many
people, including George Birkhoff. Maybe even to Mrs. Wiener, for all I know.
Especially, I suppose to Mrs. Wiener [laughter].
Tucker: There was a tangle among the three of them having to do with ergodic
theory.
..
Goldstine: Yes, there was. All three of them made great discoveries in the
ergodic theory, and I think not one of them wished the other two did at that
point [laughter].
Nebeker: How did von Neumann get interested in computing?
Goldstine: I don't know how he originally got interested in computing. You
see, he started life as a chemical engineer. Whether it was due to his
engineering training, I just don't know. For all I know when he was a kid of
three he was already squaring numbers on box cars. While he was at Goettingen,
Courant, Kurt Friedrichs, and Hans Lewy produced a paper. I think the date is
about 1928, but I'm no longer sure. I've also totally forgotten the title of
the paper. But it's the paper in which they show that partial difference
equations have stability problems connected with them unless you observe
certain inequalities. The so-called "Courant condition" came into being out of
that. I think they did that as rather a formal exercise, but von Neumann was
around and he understood it and tucked it away in the back of his head. He not
only made use of that, but he put it into a Fourier context which made it more
usable.
..
When he was at Los Alamos he had to do a lot of computing, and that's the
reason I'm hesitant. I suspect that right away from early times that he
understood and had no problem with writing down differential equations which
describe physical phenomena and was quite prepared to integrate those
equations. I think that's why he was so interested in this
Courant-Friedrichs-Lewy paper. When he went to Los Alamos he made several
great contributions, one of which was that he taught people there that it was
possible to write down differential equations which described the actions of
the phenomena that they were dealing with, instead of just trying to do
physical experiments which were kind of a masked form of analog experiment.
The second thing is, specifically, he took a very active part in something
called the implosion problem.
..
There were two bombs in the early days. The first consisted of two halves of a
sphere, and the sphere itself would be critical if the two halves were
together. The two halves were kept apart, and there was a gun fired,
essentially, that drove one half-sphere against the other half. When the two
came together the total sphere became critical and the nuclear process took
place. That was the crudest bomb. The second bomb was more sophisticated. The
idea there was you started with a sphere, and you packed conventional
explosive around it carefully, and you had lenses which would focus the energy
in such a way that the sphere would be compressed tighter and tighter. Its
density kept going up, and up, and as its density goes up, the size that it
needs to be to be critical gets smaller and smaller. So eventually you reach a
point where the sphere becomes critical.
..
That's the thing that von Neumann worked on. He got Los Alamos to rent from
IBM a tremendous collection of punch-card machines, and he had them doing
partial differential equation calculations all over the lot on this problem.
The only thing, therefore, that I can tell you with certainty is that at Los
Alamos already he was very sophisticated in big partial-differential-equation
calculations.
Tucker: That is my impression. As I heard it put one time, he wanted to be
able to try out certain ideas about partial differential equations. This was
beyond his own computer, I mean his own mental computer. So what he wanted was
something that would extend his powers of experimenting with partial
differential equations. Of course this had something to do with his interest
in the weather problem. There he was into an area of partial differential
equations that hadn't really been dealt with.
..
Nebeker: But given the fact that these systems of partial differential
equations had resisted the best efforts of mathematicians a long time, it's
perhaps remarkable that he would think that the right approach is the
computational one, that it was after all feasible to solve these equations
numerically.
Goldstine: Well, I think that during the war period a lot of things were
moving forward. He tried one calculation on the Harvard Mark 1, which was an
electromechanical machine and was simply too slow. But people had never really
tried solving partial differential equations numerically.
..
Tucker: They tried analog solutions, but not numerical solutions.
Goldstine: Right. And Johnny had a lot of confidence somehow in his own
fate-that he could do it. Then he and I got together. We ran into each other,
and he knew then that the apparatus was available that would do it.
Nebeker: This was the ENIAC?
..
Goldstine: Yes, and von Neumann was a consultant at Aberdeen Proving Grounds
where I was. He was more than a consultant. One of Veblen's remarkable
contributions to Aberdeen was forming a scientific advisory committee. And on
that scientific advisory committee he had a number of great people. He had von
Neumann, he had Henry Norris Russell from Princeton. He had Philip Alger, I
think was his name, from General Electric, an extraordinarily nice, brilliant
engineer. He had a man named [Hugh] Dryden, whose first name I've forgotten
now, who was the head of what is now NASA. (it was Langley Field, and it had a
different name in those days. It had to do with aerodynamics.) There was a man
named Bernard Lewis who was the head of some scientific office in the Bureau
of Mines. There was Harold Urey, the chemist. There was George Kistiakowsky.
It was a whale of a good group of people, and von Neumann, as I say, was one
of that group.
..
That's how von Neumann and I got together again, and whether in fact he
remembered that I had met him in Ann Arbor I sort of doubt. But it certainly
is true that as soon as he heard what we were building at Philadelphia, he
really knew that that was the device that was going to solve hyperbolic
partial differential equations. I think that that moment changed his life for
the rest of his days.
Tucker: A footnote: Alger was a student of Lefschetz' at the University of
Kansas.
..
Goldstine: Was he? I had no idea. He was a very charming gentleman. And that
explains, I guess, how Veblen got a hold of him. I never knew where he came
from.
Nebeker: Could I ask you about James Alexander? You mention in your book that
he was helpful in getting the computer project accepted at Institute. Did he
have an interest himself in computing?
..
Goldstine: I think not in computing. I think that Alexander's interest when I
knew him in those days was in electronics. He loved electronic gadgets. He was
building amplifiers. I think he was running away from mathematics at that
period as fast as he could. So I don't think he wanted to compute anything. He
was just a great gentleman, and he wanted to do nice things for Johnny. And I
guess he realized that this was very important, and he was glad to help. I was
very fond of him.
..
Nebeker: We wanted also to ask about G”del. Did you know him?
Goldstine: That would be an overstatement. Deane Montgomery knew him better
than anybody that I know. I always remember one time Gwen Blake being very
upset because I was seen talking to G”del.
Tucker: She was the secretary.
..
Goldstine: The secretary to the department. In those days a department had one
secretary, and everybody queued up with their math papers to have her type
them. So there would be Veblen and von Neumann and Einstein and Alexander and
Weyl, all these people would be in a queue waiting with these monumental
papers to get them typed. Whereas nowadays there are probably forty-seven
secretaries in the department. But Miss Blake was very upset because she saw
me talking to G”del, and she came to the conclusion that I was talking G”del
out of his office. And how the heck that was, I don't know. Why she should
suspect me of wanting G”del's office. At any rate, I think she went to Veblen,
and Veblen came to see me to find out if I was really going to dispossess poor
G”del. It was the last thing I wanted to do [laughter]. No, I really didn't
know him. We would chat a little bit, but he was so far out, I couldn't talk
to him. Did you ever have any luck with him?
..
Tucker: No.
Goldstine: He wasn't the kind of guy that you would just go off and chat about
something with, you know. He was crazy. You had to have something that you
really were vitally concerned about, mathematical, that he could help you with
or you could talk to him about. In the cafeteria at the Institute there were
tables. You would bring your tray and sit down. You could sit next to Hermann
Weyl, and he was perfectly prepared to chat with you. And I'll always remember
the time on that score when he said to me, after I kept saying Professor Weyl
to him, "You must call me Hermann." It took a tremendous gulp for me to do
that because this was one of the great figures to me.
..
Anyway, G”del was never the guy who came in and plunked his tray down, and you
would just chat about what the Brooklyn Dodgers did yesterday, you know. I
don't know what he and Einstein talked about every day when they went back and
forth, but G”del had all kinds of obsessions and problems, and if anybody in
the world besides Einstein talked with him it was Deane Montgomery.
Tucker: Well, G”del got quite interested in unified field theory.
..
Goldstine: Did he?
Tucker: Yes. I learned this from Oskar Morgenstern. They both came from
Vienna, and Oskar regarded G”del with great awe. But at the same time he felt
that G”del was someone who needed protection, that he needed looking after.
Goldstine: That certainly is true.
..
Tucker: Oskar Morgenstern was quite willing to take on that responsibility.
Goldstine: Well, he brought him over, too. I think he took a lot of
responsibility. Oskar was a great gentleman.
Tucker: Yes, and because of game theory, I was quite closely involved with
Oskar.
..
Goldstine: Of course, you would have been. There's a nice story. I forget who
told it originally. It's supposed to be true. The story was that G”del decided
to become an American citizen. Somebody convinced him he should be an American
citizen. So he read the Constitution and found what he thought was a
contradiction in it. And von Neumann carefully argued G”del out of this by
some sophistry. He showed him that it really wasn't a contradiction, that you
could read it in such a way that it was all consistent. And G”del bought this
[laughter].
..
G”del picked Morgenstern and Einstein to be his sponsors. They went off to
Trenton and appeared before some Jewish judge there who was really wowed. (The
reason I mention Jewish is because Albert Einstein to him was the great
figure.) So he spent most of his time chatting to Einstein. He could care less
about this little Austrian who wanted to become an American citizen. After he
finally talked as much as he reasonably could to Einstein, he realized he had
to say something to this guy before he made him a citizen. And he said, "And
of course, none of this that we have been talking about could happen in a
country like the United States, could it, Professor G”del." And G”del says,
"Well, you know I think maybe ... " And Morgenstern gave him a jab in the ribs
and got him to say no, it couldn't happen in America. Then they made the
proper signs over G”del head, and he became an American citizen [laughter].
But, no, I didn't know him, really.
..
Nebeker: We also wanted to ask about Hermann Weyl. Are there any anecdotes,
anything you remember in particular you remember about him?
Goldstine: I always was struck by the difference between him and Johnny von
Neumann. There are jokes, one of which Johnny always swore was false. That's
the story that, I don't know, Hermann Weyl was going to prove some theorem, a
very deep and profound theorem, let's say it was the Riemann-Roch theorem. I
don't know if it was the Reimann-Roch theorem, but that was one I always have
trouble with, so let's say that was the theorem. And Weyl gave a lecture on
why this is a very deep, profound result, and he gave a very complicated
proof. And the apocryphal story goes that at the end of the lecture there's
this kid who is supposed to have raised his hand at the back of the class and
said, "Professor Weyl, may I show you a proof?" And goes up to the board and
goes zip, zip, zip, zip, and in about 15 lines has a brilliant proof of this
thing.
..
I asked Johnny about it, and he said no, that wasn't true. But it is true, if
you talk to Natasha Brunswick, who was in those days Natasha Artin. Natasha
says that there was always Johnny with these tight pants on. All of Johhny's
life, whatever size suit he bought, he always ate too much, and the suit was
always one size smaller than Johnny. Even as a student in Goettingen, his
behind was always ready to bulge out of his pants. I guess Natasha and
everybody in the class were always charmed.
..
But Joachim, who was one of Hermann's children, told me that when Hermann used
to work in his house on Mercer Street, in the study in there, you would hear
groans coming out of the study. That Weyl worked at things in sort of anguish,
that it was hard for him, that he delivered his theorems practically like a
woman giving birth to a child. That's so different from Johnny, because when
he and I would be working at something, when we'd get stuck, he'd say, "Okay,
that's it, " and pack it up. It might be that he'd phone at two in the morning
to say, "This is how the proof goes." But it might be three weeks, a month or
so later, or it might even be I who would come in a month or so later and say,
"This is, maybe, how to go." But he never struggled with something. When he
got stuck, he filed it somehow, and it just came out easily. I suspect that
Weyl was probably the deeper of the two mathematicians.
..
Tucker: And also the broader.
Goldstine: And the broader, yes.
Tucker: Weyl is the only complete mathematician that I've ever had the
privilege to know.
Goldstine: Yes, I think that's probably true.
..
Tucker: Johnny was essentially an analyst. I've seen him give one of his quick
proofs on the spot, of a topological result, and it was clumsy.
Goldstine: Yes. He told me at one time that he had no facility at all in
topology. He said he never felt comfortable with that.
Tucker: Whereas Weyl was an excellent topologist.
..
Goldstine: Everything he did was beautiful. Everything he did. I guess the
difference is that von Neumann could run rings around anybody speedwise. In
that way he was probably the most brilliant mathematician that I've ever
known. I suppose maybe he's one of the quickest there ever was. Weyl was
probably one of the deepest and broadest that there ever was. And that's a
real difference. I mean, if a guy combined both of those they would call him
Isaac Newton, and probably they did. But I think that's the difference,
really.
..
Tucker: This is the centennial year of Hermann Weyl. And it's being observed
by the University of Kiel. They're having a conference there right at the end
of June. One of the speakers is the younger Weyl.
Goldstine: Michael.
Tucker: Yes. Joachim is, of course, gone. But Michael is presenting a talk
about his personal recollections of his father.
..
Goldstine: How nice. Well, his father was a remarkable gentleman. Weyl was a
charming person, too. It's so funny. When he was married to Hella, he was the
real German Geheimrat. Rather pompous, very dignified. Nobody was allowed to
smoke near him, because Hella said he had allergies. One had to treat him very
much the way you would treat the great German professor. After she died, he
used to come to our house because we had one of the few television sets around
in his neighborhood. He'd come to our house, and the thing that he always
wanted to watch-we would have to turn it on for him-was wrestling [laughter] .
He loved these phony wrestling matches. And he was a real German grandfather
with our daughter. He was actually a kind of Santa Claus type. He wasn't
pompous at all, he wasn't stuffy, he wasn't the Herr Geheimrat. He was just a
very sweet, relaxed old German gentleman. And it was just very nice.
..
Nebeker: How long did you know Hermann Weyl?
Goldstine: Well, from '46, when I came to the Institute, until whenever it was
he died. We knew him best in that little interim period. But when his first
wife was alive he was sort of difficult to approach, and then when his second
wife was alive-and she was a very approachable person-they lived at least half
the year abroad..
..
Tucker: For legal reasons, I think she had to. She was in some sort of
business or property in Switzerland that required her to be there.
Goldstine: In fact her husband, and there were a couple of brothers, they
owned what's called the Baer Bank. The Baers owned a private bank in Zurich,
and they're wealthy as can be. Hermann, at the end if he hadn't died I guess
would not have been able to get back into the United States. I only half
remember the story, but as a non-native born American, in those days, his
rights as an American citizen were not as good as our rights as American
citizens. The immigration people finally told him that if he left the country
that they might not be willing to readmit him unless he came back within a
certain number of months.
..
Tucker: Well, this is for income tax purposes.
Goldstine: Well, this wasn't just taxes. This actually had to do with his
citizenship, and it was very mean. This was now the McCarthy period we're
discussing. There was a lot more behind it than taxes. This had to do with
foreigners. There was a xenophobia in America, really. A number of us tried to
get a private bill put through by the senator, Alexander Smith-was that his
name? And he wouldn't do it. He was also afraid. It was rather pitiful to
think that this great figure, who was such a monument to America, would be
excluded from America, whereas some of these rats who had been communists and
had defected from Russia to the United States were being brought in, given
citizenship, and given all kinds of money. It was really a terrible way for a
man of such great stature to be treated by our country. I guess it wasn't
really until John Kennedy came along that some of that whole McCarthy spirit
got washed away. But I don't remember the story in any detail anymore. Except
that it was not a good story, I mean not good in the sense of not reflecting
on the United States very well.
..
Nebeker: I'm fascinated by what you said about the Weyl visit in your house.
Are there any other things you can think of, things he liked to do or things
you did with him?
Goldstine: No, I don't remember. These things are all so long ago, anyway, and
a lot of one's memories get perverted so completely, and some of the things I
remember, it's pure happenstance. Probably some I've remembered wrongly
anyway. But that's all I can really remember about Weyl.
..
Tucker: With regard to his Geheimrat behavior, there were verses that were
composed by young mathematicians at Fine Hall in the 1930s along the lines of
some things that the seniors did. They had step singing, and they had
something called the Faculty Song. A verse, for example, about Eisenhart:
"Here's to good old Luther Pfahler, in four dimensions he's a whaler. He's
built a country club for math, where you can even take a bath."
Goldstine: That's marvelous.
..
Tucker: Then verses were made up just for Fine Hall purposes. There was never
one made up for Johnny von Neumann, that I know of. But there was one for
Herman Weyl.
Goldstine: Oh, was there?
Tucker: Yes. "Here we have a punning Aryan, who likes to make groups
unitarian. He is that most saintly German, the one, the great, the holy
Hermann."
..
Goldstine: That's marvelous.
Tucker: 'Holy Hermann' was a name that Lefschetz invented.
Goldstine: Right, 'Heiliger Hermann'.
Tucker: And the one about Veblen: "Here's to Uncle Oswald V., lover of England
and her tea. He is that mathematician of note, who uses four buttons to fasten
his coat." You know he always had a fourth button on his coat because he was
so tall and slim.
..
Goldstine: We always had a theory with Veblen that after he bought a new
jacket and pants he would hire somebody to wear them for a few years so that
they wouldn't look new when he put them on. I don't ever remember seeing him
in anything that looked new, do you?
Tucker: No.
Goldstine: He did something to make them old, I don't know what it was.