150, 200 years ago U.S. existed.OK.
...OK, but the examples of mathematicians you gave me, they were all very very old ( 150 to 200 years old, or more ).
At that time, the US was still a very new nation.
Now, I ask you, which is tha nation which propelled the stronger breacktrhoughs in:
- space engineering
- optics
- electronic engineering
- microprocessors
- ..
Thanks
You don't get a Poincare (France) in 4 years.
You get a Poincare in 100 years.
That's called the culture of a country.
For example French mathematicain Fourier started what it is now known as Fourier Transforms.
In the 19th. century, in Germany, the German school of mathematics produced a long lineage of mathematicians in the footsteps of Fourier.
Riemann, Gauss, Runge from Germany.
Up until 1958's Goertzel's (Germany) Fast Fourier Transform algorithm.
Goertzel's fast Fourier Transform is being used across U.S. in Dual Tone Multi Frequency Detection in Central Offices for detections of what buttons one presses on one's telephone.
From Riemann to Goertzel, that's more than 100 years of mathematical thought cultivated in the German culture.
Regarding:
"...Now, I ask you, which is tha nation which propelled the stronger breacktrhoughs in:
- space engineering
- optics
- electronic engineering
- microprocessors..."
you keep missing my point.
These are done in U.S. with an infusion of new blood from Socialist Europe.
They are not done in U.S.' culture with the U.S. culture.
In Space Engineering, read the contribution of German immigrant von Braun.
In Electronic Engineering and microprocessors, take Intel for example.
It's founded and kept to this day by a Hungarian immigrant.
Texas Instruments, Motorola have an abundance of Electrical Engineers educated in Socialist Europe that they import.
These Electrical Engineers, pillars of U.S. high tech, are not made locally in U.S..
In my experience, the U.S. Engineers are mainly technologists (like programming in Java, Visual Basic, C++) at about the level of a 2-year Community College in Europe (like Institut Universitaire de Technologie in France).
The Engineers from Europe are mainly scientists, with a clue about technology.
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