45 pages 1 hour read

G. H. Hardy

A Mathematician's Apology

Nonfiction | Biography | Adult | Published in 1940

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Background

Sociopolitical Context: Hardy, Cambridge, and War

Godfrey H. Hardy, one of the 20th century’s most prominent mathematicians, worked within a set of distinct social and political beliefs that influenced his choice of specialties, his behavior in his work life, and his social world. A strong supporter of public reforms, Hardy tried to tilt the English study of math away from destructive ends and toward more artful uses.

Although brought up in a life of privilege and trained to a rigorous logical standard, Hardy objected to the elitism that he found in English higher education. A friendly conversationalist, he nonetheless felt that the culture at Cambridge was self-congratulatory, and he avoided much of the university’s organized socializing. Additionally, he was an atheist and refused to attend the religious services required of university members.

During World War I, Hardy supported the efforts of mathematician-philosopher Bertrand Russell and others who argued for Britain’s withdrawal from the battlefield. Russell served a stint in prison for his beliefs; Hardy wrote a broadside that clarified those events to the outside world, and his famously rigorous regard for the truth helped clear up some of the biased beliefs about the period. Frustrated by the university faculty’s enthusiastic support of the war effort, he left Cambridge for a time and instead taught at Oxford.