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Nasar S. — A Beautiful Mind
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Íàçâàíèå: A Beautiful Mind
Àâòîð: Nasar S.
Àííîòàöèÿ: In this biography, Sylvia Nasar recreates the life of a mathematical genius whose brilliant career was cut short by schizophrenia and who, after three decades of devastating mental illness, miraculously recovered and was honored with a Nobel Prize. A Beautiful Mind traces the meteoric rise of John Forbes Nash, Jr., from his lonely childhood in West Virginia to his student years at Princeton, where he encountered Albert Einstein, John von Neumann, and a host of other mathematical luminaries. At 21, the handsome, ambitious, eccentric graduate student invented what would become the most influential theory of rational human behavior in modern social science. Nash's contribution to game theory would ultimately revolutionize the field of economics. At 30, Nash was poised to take his dreamed-of place in the pantheon of history's greatest mathematicians. Then Nash suffered a catastrophic mental breakdown. Nasar details Nash's harrowing descent into insanity - his bizarre delusions that he was the Prince of Peace; his resignation from MIT, flight to Europe, and attempt to renounce his American citizenship; his repeated hospitalizations, from the storied McLean, where he came to know the poet Robert Lowell, to the crowded wards of a state hospital; his "enforced interludes of rationality" during which he was able to return briefly to mathematical research. At age 66, twin miracles - a spontaneous remission of his illness and the sudden decision of the Nobel Prize committee to honor his contributions to game theory - restored the world to him. Nasar recounts the bitter behind-the-scenes battle in Stockholm over whether to grant the ultimate honor in science to a man thought to be "mad." She describes Nash's current ambition to pursue new mathematical breakthroughs and his efforts to be a loving father to his adult son.
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Ñòàòóñ ïðåäìåòíîãî óêàçàòåëÿ: Ãîòîâ óêàçàòåëü ñ íîìåðàìè ñòðàíèö
ed2k: ed2k stats
Ãîä èçäàíèÿ: 1998
Êîëè÷åñòâî ñòðàíèö: 457
Äîáàâëåíà â êàòàëîã: 21.02.2006
Îïåðàöèè: Ïîëîæèòü íà ïîëêó |
Ñêîïèðîâàòü ññûëêó äëÿ ôîðóìà | Ñêîïèðîâàòü ID
Ïðåäìåòíûé óêàçàòåëü
Legg, Martha Nash (sister), on Nash’s childhood 32—33
Legg, Martha Nash (sister), on Nash’s desire to leave MIT 235
Legg, Martha Nash (sister), on trip to California 147—148
Legg, Martha Nash (sister), sanctuary search revealed to 302
Legg, Martha Nash (sister), World War II and 35—36
Lemke, Carl 339
Leonard, Robert 52 84 86 94 363
Leray, Jean 236 285 298 300
Lettvin, Jerome 134 250
Levinson, Norman 135 143 153 155 200 320
Levinson, Norman, and onset of Nash’s schizophrenia 243 244
Levinson, Norman, background of 137—138
Levinson, Norman, McCarthyism and 153—154 187
Levinson, Norman, Nash’s Brandeis post supported by 313 314
Levinson, Norman, Nash’s McLean commitment and 254 257
Levinson, Norman, Nash’s professorship and 162—163
Levinson, Norman, Nash’s resignation and 265
Levinson, Norman, on Nash’s parsimony 233
Levinson, Norman, Riemann Hypothesis and 230
Levinson, Norman, Riemannian manifolds and 158 160 161 163
Levinson, Zipporah “Fagi” 136 137 144 172 264 265 322
Levinson, Zipporah “Fagi”, Alicia Nash aided by 262
Levinson, Zipporah “Fagi”, John Charles Nash’s birth and 263—264
Levinson, Zipporah “Fagi”, Nash monitored by 320
Levinson, Zipporah “Fagi”, Nash’s belongings moved by 322
Levinson, Zipporah “Fagi”, Nash’s McLean commitment and 255 259 260
Levinson, Zipporah “Fagi”, on Alicia Nash 223
Levinson, Zipporah “Fagi”, sublet arranged by 319
Lewin, Roger 335
Lewis, John L. 28
Lewy, Hans 221
Lide, David 41
Life 32 244
Life, game of 158
Lincoln Laboratory 133
Lindbeck, Assar 356 359—373
Littlewood, J.E. 130
Locke, John 94
Lofgren, Karl-Gustaf 359—360 364
Logic 65
Lopez-Harrison de Larde, Alicia (mother-in-law) 191 192 194 201 342
Lopez-Harrison de Larde, Alicia (mother-in-law), European trip of 276—277 279 280
Lopez-Harrison de Larde, Alicia (mother-in-law), John Charles Nash in care of 277 283 287 296 309 341
Lopez-Harrison de Larde, Alicia (mother-in-law), John Charles Nash’s mental problems and 343 344
Lopez-Harrison de Larde, Alicia (mother-in-law), United States left by 346
Louthan, John 38—39
Lowell, Robert 253 255 256—257 259 260
Lucas, Robert 371
Luce, R.Duncan 107 122
Mackey, George 11 155 257
Mad Hatter’s Tea 264
Magee, Harold 291
Maler, Karl-Goran 358 362 364 367 369 370—371 372
Malgrange, Bernard 300
Manganaro, Jim 380
Manganaro, Patty 380
Manhattan project 56 81 107 110 153 193
MANIAC 82
Manic depressive illness (bipolar disorder) 18 258 318—319
Manifolds, Algebraic 123—124 128—132
Manifolds, Riemannian, embedding of 155—163 203 204 218 219 345
Mao Tse-tung 332
Marshall University 346 384
Marshall, Alfred 89
Martha Washington College 27
Martin, Eva (grandmother) 27 29
Martin, James Everett (grandfather) 27
Martin, Lucy 243
Martin, Margaret Virginia (mother) see “Nash Margaret
Martin, William Ted 132 135 137 153 154 233
Martin, William Ted, and Nash’s professorship 155
Martin, William Ted, and onset of Nash’s schizophrenia 243 244 250
Martin, William Ted, Michigan position arranged by 303
Martin, William Ted, Nash’s McLean commitment and 254
Martin, William Ted, Nash’s resignation and 265
Martin, William Ted, Nash’s tenure and 224 244 249 250
Martin, William Ted, senior seminar arranged by 319
Martinez, Maximiliano Hernandez 191
Marx, Karl 88
Mary Nash College for Women 26
Marymount High School for Girls 192—194
Maskin, Eric 362
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) 55 132—146 152—163
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Alicia Larde accepted to 194
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), description of 133
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), game theory seminar at 319
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), McCarthyism at 153
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Nash’s resignation from 265
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Nash’s tenure hopes at 224 244 249 250
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Nash’s unhappiness at 235
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Nash’s visiting position at 309
Matewan 28
Mathematical Intelligencer, The 11 78
Mathematician’s Apology, The (Hardy) 228
Mathematics, competition in 228—229
Mathematics, Hilberl program in 52
Mathematics, in World War II 55—57 100
Mathematische Grundlagen der Quantenmechanik (von Neumann) 45 81
Mattson, John Otto 184
Mattuck, Arthur 167—168 177 178 180 182 199 201 223 263 316 317 387
Mattuck, Arthur, John Stier and 344
Mattuck, Arthur, Nash’s illness and 262
Mattuck, Arthur, Nash’s McLean commitment and 256 258
Mattuck, Arthur, on Forrester 204
Mazur, Barry 131 141
McAfee, Preston 377
McCarthy, John 102 146 258
McCarthy, Joseph 100 110 135 184
McCarthyism 100 110 135 137 152—154 185 187
McCormick, Mrs. 195
McDonald, John 116
McKinsey, J.C.C 117 185 188 189
McLean Hospital 253—261
McLean Hospital, description of 255
McLean Hospital, optimism at 259
McLean Hospital, treatment philosophy of 259
McMillan, John 377 378
Meder, Albert E., Jr. 303
Meitner, Lise 56
Mele, Howard S. 307—308 310 312—313
Men of Mathematics (Bell) 34—35 230—231
Meteorology 81
Michigan, University of 45 149 303—304
Milgrom, Paul 362 376—377
Miller, James 303 304
Milnor, John 101 132 170 234 296 308—309 312 313
Milnor, John, Alicia Nash’s driving lessons from 284
Milnor, John, at International Mathematical Congress 301
Milnor, John, at RAND 117 149—151
Milnor, John, knotted curves paper of 72
Milnor, John, Nash’s board game and 77 78
Milnor, John, on Nash’s 1960s work 309
Milnor, John, on Nash’s speculative questions 68—69
Milnor, John, on Princeton student life 64
Milnor, John, on trip to California 147—148
Milnor, John, one-year Princeton post arranged by 309—310 311
Min-max theorem 83 86 95 96
Minsky, Gloria 316
Minsky, Marvin L 95 143 145 200 208 223 316 387
MIT see “Massachusetts Institute of Technology”
Mobius strip 66
Montgomery, Deane 296 308—309
Mood, Alexander 112 113—114 187
Moore, John Coleman 198 269 341—342 344
Morawetz, Cathleen Synge 216 217 246 281—282
Morgenstern, Oskar 81 83 85 87 88 90 91 94 97 102 105 149 284 308—309 363
Morgenstern, Oskar, background of 84
Morgenstern, Oskar, game-theory conference organized by 296—297
Morgenstern, Oskar, Nash’s potential job with 284—285 286
Morse, Marston 55 56 296
Moser, Gertrude 222 239 251 257 262
Moser, Jurgen 216 223 224 243 257 321—322
Moser, Jurgen, funds raised by 303
Moser, Jurgen, Nash paper refereed by 318
Moser, Jurgen, Nash’s respect for 222
Moser, Jurgen, New Year’s Eve party of 239—240
Moser, Jurgen, on Fields deliberations 226
Moser, Jurgen, Riemannian manifolds and 158 159 161 162
Moskovitz, David 44
Motchane, Leon 298
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus 281
Mueller, Egbert 260 261
Myerson, Roger 91 355
Myrdal, Gunnar 358 359 368
Nagel, Bengt 368
Nalebuff, Barry 97
Nash equilibrium 115 118 119 329 339 361—362 375
Nash equilibrium, assessment of 96—98
Nash equilibrium, dominant vs.dominated strategies in 97
Nash equilibrium, elaboration of 93—96 (see also “Nobel Prize in economics of 1994”)
Nash told of Nobel by 21—22
Nash — Moser theorem 159
Nash, Alexander Quincy (grandfather) 26
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife) 190—202 298 299 301 314 322 388
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), 1959—1960 European stay of 265—282
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), accepted at MIT 194
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), and onset of Nash’s schizophrenia 242 245 248—252
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), assessments of Nash’s relationship with 223
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), at New Jersey Transit 346
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), at New Year’s party 240
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), at Nobel ceremonies 379 380
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), attracted to Nash 196—198
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), background and childhood of 191—194
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), breakdown of marriage of 296
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Carrier commitment and 304 306
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Cohen and 237
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), death of father of 192 301
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), early married life of 222—223
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Eleanor Stier’s meeting with 201—202
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), electroshock eschewed by 306
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), employment problems of 341—343
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), European trip of 233—234
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), in Nash’s class 196—197
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), informed of Nash’s Nobel 371
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Italy trip of 276
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), John Charles Nash’s graduate studies encouraged by 346
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), John Charles Nash’s mental problems and 343 344
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Moore’s relationship with 341
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nash committed to McLean by 253—261
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nash divorced by 302—303 306
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nash offered housing by 340
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nash’s 1962 European trip and 298 301
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nash’s contemplation of marriage with 210—212
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nash’s courtship with 199—202
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nash’s divorce threat against 262
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nash’s Geneva stay and 273 278 279
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nash’s Trenton State hospitalization and 287 288 290 291 294
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nash’s wedding to 212
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Nobel Prize and 383
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), on Nash’s remission 349
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), on return from Europe 283 284 287
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), potential reconciliation with 308 309 310 313 316 319
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), pregnancy of 235 248 251 263—264
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), renewal of marriage of 385—386
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), sex discrimination suit filed by 342—343
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), son of see “Nash John
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), Virginia Nash introduced to 211
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), von Neumann prize and 339
Nash, Alicia Larde (wife), wedding of 212
Nash, Jesse (uncle) 26
Nash, John Charles Martin (son) 255 261 263—264 266 283 301 322 326 342
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), Alicia Lopez-Harrison’s care of 277 283 287 296 309 341
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), at Trenton State Hospital 383
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), birth of 255 262—264
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), Boston visited by 345
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), brought to Europe 276—277 279 280
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), computer seen as therapeutic for 384 385
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), custody of 303
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), fundamentalism of 343
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), John Stier’s first meeting with 344
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), math studies of 345—346
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), medication refused by 344 384
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), mental problems of 343—344 351 383—385
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), Nash’s relationship with 380 383—385 388
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), Nash’s separations from 308 314 316
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), Nobel Prize and 383
Nash, John Charles Martin (son), von Neumann prize and 339
Nash, John E, Sr.(father) 25—34 123
Nash, John E, Sr.(father), background and childhood of 26
Nash, John E, Sr.(father), death of 209
Nash, John E, Sr.(father), health problems of 208—209
Nash, John E, Sr.(father), Japanese invasion feared by 35—36
Nash, John E, Sr.(father), John Stier and 206 208 210
Nash, John E, Sr.(father), New York trip of 208—209
Nash, John E, Sr.(father), West Point suggested by 39
Nash, John F., Jr., 1959—1960 European stay of 265—282
Nash, John F., Jr., 1962 European trip of 298
Nash, John F., Jr., 1964 European trip of 311—312
Nash, John F., Jr., 1967 West Coast trip of 320—322
Nash, John F., Jr., alien races and 13 241—242 243 275
Nash, John F., Jr., as introverted child 30—31
Nash, John F., Jr., assessment of schizophrenia diagnosis for 351—353
Nash, John F., Jr., assessment of work of 11—12
Nash, John F., Jr., at Brandeis 314—322
Nash, John F., Jr., at Carnegie Tech 39—45 129
Nash, John F., Jr., at Carrier Clinic 304 305—308 312—313
Nash, John F., Jr., at McLean Hospital 253—261
Nash, John F., Jr., at Trenton State Hospital 287 288—294 302 306 344
Nash, John F., Jr., authority disdained by 12
Nash, John F., Jr., autobiographical essay of 32 34 44 46 91 129 157 159 224—225 295 354
Nash, John F., Jr., birth of 30
Nash, John F., Jr., blackboard messages left by 332—334
Nash, John F., Jr., bombmaking by 37
Nash, John F., Jr., chemistry studied by 41
Nash, John F., Jr., childhood of 15 29—39
Nash, John F., Jr., citizenship renunciation attempted by 271—272
Nash, John F., Jr., classes avoided by 68
Nash, John F., Jr., computer work of 336—337 349 350 384
Nash, John F., Jr., computers admired by 12
Nash, John F., Jr., delusions of 325—328 353
Nash, John F., Jr., diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia 258—259
Nash, John F., Jr., dismissed from RAND 184—189
Nash, John F., Jr., divorce considered by 257 262
Nash, John F., Jr., draft avoided by 123—127
Nash, John F., Jr., draft feared by 47 202 229
Nash, John F., Jr., drug treatments of 16—17
Nash, John F., Jr., earliest memories of 25
Nash, John F., Jr., early education of 31 34 38—39
Nash, John F., Jr., early mathematical talent of 34
Nash, John F., Jr., East Germany stay of 281
Nash, John F., Jr., engineering studied by 39 40 41
Nash, John F., Jr., faculty position sought by 123
Nash, John F., Jr., fellow students questioned by 72
Nash, John F., Jr., French studies of 297—298
Nash, John F., Jr., games invented by 75 76—78 102
Nash, John F., Jr., generals passed by 92—93
Nash, John F., Jr., Geneva stay of 273 274—279
Nash, John F., Jr., graduate studies of 45—47 49 58—98
Nash, John F., Jr., handedness of 31
Nash, John F., Jr., hospitalization feared by 325 330 340
Nash, John F., Jr., indecent exposure charge against 184—189 210
Nash, John F., Jr., initial recovery of 295
Nash, John F., Jr., insulin coma therapy of 291—294 299 306 329 353
Nash, John F., Jr., intellectual independence sought by 68 71
Nash, John F., Jr., investments of 233 236
Nash, John F., Jr., job sought for 284—285 286
Nash, John F., Jr., marriage of see “Nash Alicia
Nash, John F., Jr., mathematics chosen by 42
Nash, John F., Jr., Nobel prize announced to 22
Nash, John F., Jr., onset of schizophrenia in 11 16 18—19 221 238 240—252
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