TY - BOOK AU - Ash,Mitchell G. AU - Söllner,Alfons TI - Forced migration and scientific change: emigre German-speaking scientists and scholars after 1933 T2 - Publications of the German Historical Institute SN - 9781139052542 (ebook) AV - E184.G3 F73 1996 U1 - 306.4/2/08931073 20 PY - 1996/// CY - Cambridge PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Germans KW - United States KW - History KW - 20th century KW - Great Britain KW - Brain drain KW - Germany KW - Emigration and immigration KW - 1933-1945 KW - Intellectual life N1 - Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015); Introduction; Forced migration and scientific change after 1933; Mitchell G. Ash and Alfons Söllner --; Part one : Physical and medical sciences --; Identification of emigration-induced scientific change; Klaus Fischer --; Physics, life, and contingency : Born, Schrödinger, and Weyl in exile; Skúli Sigurdsson --; Emigration from country and discipline : the journey of a German physicist into American photosythesis research; Alan D. Beyerchen --; The impact of German medical scientists on British medicine : a case study of Oxford, 1933-45; Paul Weindling --; Part two : Psychology, psychoanalysis, pedagogy --; Emigré psychologists after 1933 : the cultural coding of scientific and professional practices; Mitchell G. Ash --; Psychoanalytic science : from Oedipus to culture; Edith Kurzweil --; The impact of emigration on German pedagogy; Heinz-Elmar Tenorth and Klaud Horn --; Part three : Social sciences --; Dismissal and emigration of German-speaking economists after 1933; Claus-Dieter Krohn --; Emigration of social scientists' schools from Austria; Christian Fleck --; The Vienna Circle in the United States and empirical research methods in sociology; Jennifer Platt and Paul K. Hoch --; From public law to political science? The emigration of German scholars after 1933 and their influence on the transformation of a discipline; Alfons Söllner --; Epilogue; The refugee scholar in America : the case of Paul Tillich; Karen J. Greenberg N2 - The dismissal of civil servants on racist or political grounds in April 1933 marked the beginning of a massive, forced exodus of mainly Jewish scholars and scientists from Nazi Germany - a phenomenon unprecedented in the modern history of academic life. The essays in this volume examine whether that 'exodus of reason' lead to significant scientific change, and if so, how that change should be characterised. The volume challenges the focus of earlier work on the 'intellectual migration' on losses (for German science) and gains (for British and American science). Instead, the authors proceed from the assumption that the sciences are open, dynamic, and historically contingent systems, and explore the multiple, complex interactions of biographical, social, and cultural circumstances with changes - or lack of change - in the émigrés' scientific thinking and research UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139052542 ER -