Arnold Scholz
Arnold Scholz (December 24, 1904 in Berlin – February 1, 1942 in Flensburg) was a German mathematician who proved Scholz's reciprocity law and introduced the Scholz conjecture.
Scholz participated in the Second Conference on the Epistemology of the Exact Sciences contributing the paper "On the Use of the Term Holism in Axiomatics" to the discussion on the foundation of mathematics.
Publications
- Scholz, Arnold (1939), Schoeneberg, Bruno (ed.), Einführung in die Zahlentheorie, Sammlung Göschen, 1131, Berlin: Walter de Gruyter & Co., ISBN 978-3-11-129619-7, MR 0031494
gollark: Well, yes.
gollark: Or via a bodily autonomy argument.
gollark: It's not murder if you do not consider fetuses "people", which is very common.
gollark: Things are actually quite good in many ways. Things are, by many metrics, better than they've ever been. Extreme poverty continues to trend vaguely downward, technology advances, people are getting richer, etc.
gollark: So it's better than conclusions which don't follow from premises.
References
- Taussky-Todd, Olga (1952), "Arnold Scholz zum Gedächtnis", Mathematische Nachrichten, 7: 379–386, doi:10.1002/mana.19520070606, ISSN 0025-584X, MR 0049129
- Arnold Scholz at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
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