Linguistique de l’écrit

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Personal evaluations of Gustav Hertz and Richard Gans for the German university lecturers association [November 8, 1934]

Johannes Stark

pp. 86-87

Résumé

There is nothing Jewish in Professor Hertz's outward appearance, behavior, and scientific activity at the Berlin Polytechnic. He is one of our few first-class German physicists, and is also a Nobel laureate.[2]He is, in addition, the nephew of the great physicist Heinrich Hertz and is thus the bearer of this famous name.[3]It would be a blunder without parallel to deny this man the right to examine students because his grandfather was a Jew.[4]I am convinced that he would not placidly accept such a personal insult but would resign from his office, leave the country, and be welcomed everywhere with open arms.[5]

Détails de la publication

Publié dans:

Hentschel Klaus (1996) Physics and national socialism: an anthology of primary sources. Basel, Birkhäuser.

Pages: 86-87

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-0348-9008-3_32

Citation complète:

Stark Johannes, 1996, Personal evaluations of Gustav Hertz and Richard Gans for the German university lecturers association [November 8, 1934]. In K. Hentschel (ed.) Physics and national socialism (86-87). Basel, Birkhäuser.