Here's a list, and it could go on forever too!

  • LIST OF GERMAN JEWS WHO HELPED MAKE GERMAN CULTURE. LIST INCOMPLETE


    Scholars Hugo Bergmann (born in Prague) Max Bodenheimer Moses Buttenweiser (1862-1939), Bible scholar [5] David Cassel Immanuel Oscar Menahem Deutsch (1829-1873), Semitic scholar and orientalist[6] Ismar Elbogen Emil Ludwig Fackenheim Eugen Fraenkel (1853–1925), pathologist and bacteriologist Jonas Fränkel Heinrich Graetz, Jewish historian (born in Posen) Manuel Joël, Jewish philosopher Isaak Markus Jost, Jewish historian Marcus Kalisch, Biblical scholar [25] Jakob Klatzkin Arthur Liebert [26] Israel Lewy Moses Mendelssohn, Jewish Enlightenment philosopher David Rosin Gershom Scholem, Jewish scholar & historian Ernst Simon Friedrich Weinreb (born in Lemberg) Benedict Zuckermann Leopold Zunz, Jewish scholar Michael Solomon Alexander, first Anglican bishop of Jerusalem (born Jewish; see BritishDictionary of National Biography) Abraham of Augsburg, a Christian German proselyte Morit Henle, composer of liturgical music and cantor of the Jewish reform movement Ridley Haim Herschell, missionary[7] Ayya Khema, Buddhist teacher (born Jewish) Adolf Lasson Georg Lasson Johanes Pfefferkorn, antisemitic controversialist (born Jewish) Friedich Adolf Philippi Johan Peter Spaeth (Moses Germanus Ashkenazi), a Christian German proselyte Edit Stein, canonized nun, Holocaust victim (born Jewish) Josph Wolff, missionary[8]
    Scientific Figures
    Max Abraham, physicist Adolf von Baeyer, industrial chemist, Nobel Prize (1905) (Jewish mother)[27] Norbert Berkowitz, physicist[28] Sir Hans Bethe, nuclear physics, Nobel Prize (1967)[29] Sir Walter Bodmer, medical researcher [9] Max Born, quantum mechanics, Nobel Prize (1954)[30] Heinrich Caro, industrial chemist[31] Nikodem Caro, industrial chemist[32] AlbertEinstein, theoretical physics, Nobel Prize (1921)[33] ErwinFinlay-Freundlich, astronomer[34] Jame Franck, quantum physics, Nobel Prize (1925)[35] Adoph Frank, industrial chemist[36] Herbert Fröhlich, physicist[37] Eugen Glueckauf, chemist, expert on atomic energy [38] Hans Goldschmidt, industrial chemist[39] Eugen Goldstein, physicist Leo Graetz, physicist Fritz Haber, developed the Haber process, Nobel Prize (1918)[40] Walter Heitler, chemist [41] Arthur Korn, physicist[42] Ernst Ising, statistical mechanics[43] Albert Ladenburg, chemist[10] Fritz London, quantum mechanics[11] Leonard Mandel, quantum optics[44] Kurt Mendelssohn, German-born British medical physicist[12] Viktor Meyer, organic chemist[45] Leonor Michaelis, biochemist[46] Albert Michelson, measured speed of light, Nobel Prize (1907) (Jewish father)[13][47] Ludwig Mond, chemist & industrialist[48] Sir Rudolf Peierls, solid state theory[49] Arno Penzias, co-discoverer of CMB, Nobel Prize (1978)[50] Alfred Philippson, geologist [51] John arles Polanyi, chemist, Nobel Prize (born Berlin) [52] Ernst Pringsheim, spectrometry, black-body radiation[53] Michael Rossmann, physicist and microbiologist (Jewish mother)[54]; [55] Rudolf Schoenheimer, biochemist[56] Arthur Schuster, spectroscopist[57] Karl Schwarzschild, physicist & astronomer[58] Franz Simon, physicist, separation of Uranium 235[14] Jack Steinberger, particle physics, Nobel Prize (1988)[59] Otto Stern, experimental physicist, Nobel Prize 943)[60] Otto Wallach, chemist, Nobel Prize (1910)[15] Richard Willstätter, chemist, Nobel Prize (1915)[61] Nathan Zuntz
    Physicians and Medical Researchers
    Adolph Baginsky, pediatrician, diphtheria researcher[62] Alfred Bielschowsky, ophthalmologist[63] Max Bielschowsky, neuropathologist[64] Konrad Bloch, biochemist, Nobel Prize (1964)[65] Marcus Elieser Bloch, physician[66] Gustav Born, professor of pharmacology[67] Edith Bulbring, Professor of pharmacy (Jewish mother)[68] Sir Ernst Chain, developed penicillin, Nobel Prize (1945)[69] Ferdinand Cohn, pioneer in microbiology[70] Julius Friedrich Cohnheim, pathologist[4] Julius Dreschfeld, physician[16] Paul Ehrlich, developed magic bullet concept, Nobel Prize (1908)[71] Arthur Eichengrün, possible inventor of aspirin[72] Wilhelm Feldberg, biologst[73] Heinz Fraenkel-Conrat, biochemist[74] Hermann Friedberg, physician[4] Carl Friedländer, bacteriologist Salome Gluecksohn-Waelsch, geneticist[75] Ernst Gräfenberg, obstetrician, the G-spot[76] Martin Gumpert, physician, writer[77] Friedrich Gustav Jakob Henle, physician Sir Bernard Katz, biophysicist, Nobel PrizeHans Kornberg, biochemist researcher Hans Kosterlitz, discovered endorphins[ Sir Hans Adolf Krebs, biochemist, Nobel Prize Fritz Lipmann, biochemist, Nobel Prize Jacques Loeb, physiologist Otto Loewi, pharmacologist, Nobel Prize Elisabeth Mann, biologist (Jewish mother) Otto Meyerhof, biochemist, Nobel Prize (1922) (Jewish father)[86] Oskar Minkowski, physiologist Hermann Munk, German physiologist who studied threadworms Albert Neisser, physician, discovered the cause of gonorrhea (Jewish father)[88] Emin Pasha, physician, naturalist, explorer[89] Nathanael Pringsheim, botanist[90] Ottomar Rosenbach, physician[4] Moritz Traube, biochemist[91] Wilhelm Traube, physician, invenr of the fever thermometer Otto Warburg, physiologist, Nobel Prize (1931) (Jewish father)[92] Karl Weigert, pathologist[93]
    Mathematicians
    Felix Bernstein, set theory[94] Maurice Block, statistician [95] Richard Brauer, modular representation theory[96] Moritz Cantor, historian of mathematics[4] Paul Cohn, algebraist [18] Richard Courant, mathematical analysis & applied mathematics[97] Max Dehn, topology[98] Paul Epstein, number theory[99] Adolf Fraenkel, set theory[100] Hans Freudenthal, algebraic topology[101] Felix Hausdorff, topology[102] Heinz Hopf, topology (Jewish father)[103] Adolf Hurwitz, mathematician[104] Carl Gustav Jakob Jacobi, analysis[105] Leopold Kronecker, number theory[106] Edmund Landau, number theory[107] Rudolf Lipschitz, mathematician[108] Kurt Mahler, mathematician[109] Hermann Minkowski, geometrical theory of numbers[19] Claus Moser, Statistician [110] Leonard Nelson, mathematician, philosopher[111] Bernhard Neumann, mathematician[112] Emmy Noether, algebra & theoretical physics[113] Alfred Pringsheim, analysis, theory of functions[114] Richard Rado, combinatorics[115] Abraham Robinson, nonstandard analysis[116] Klaus Roth, diophantine approximation, Fields Medal (1958)[117] Arthur Moritz Schönflies, mathematician[118] Issai Schur, mathematician[119] Otto Toeplitz, linear algebra & functional analysis[120]
    Technical Scientists
    Ralph Baer, inventor of the games console[121] Emile Berliner, inventor of the gramophone[122] Emanuel Goldberg (1881-1970, from Russia, but published in German), pioneeredMicrodots and microfilm retrieval technology Julius Edar Lilienfeld, electrical engineer[124] Siegfrie Marcus, automobile pioneer[125] Michae O. Rabin, computer algorithms, Turing Award (1976)[126] Reinhld Rudenberg, electrical engineer and inventor, [127] Joseh Weizenbaum,

    Amazed 17 fév 2009, 12:41 - Signaler un abus
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germany sucks

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