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The Prize's Rite

Claim:   No Nobel Prize is awarded for mathematics because a mathematician was carrying on an affair with Alfred Nobel's wife.

Status:   False.

Origins:   The renowned Nobel Prize is the legacy of Swedish chemist, inventor, and industrialist Alfred Nobel, Nobel Prize whose 1895 will specified that most of his fortune be set aside to establish a fund for the awarding of five annual prizes "to those who, during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind." The first Nobel Prizes were distributed on 10 December 1901, the fifth anniversary of Nobel's death, for achievements in the fields specified by Nobel: physics, chemistry, medicine, literature, and peace. (A prize for a sixth category, economics, was added by the Bank of Sweden beginning in 1969.)

In the century since the Nobel Foundation was established, many have speculated on the reasons why Alfred Nobel did not provide for a prize to be awarded for achievement in the field of mathematics. Surely an eminent man of science such as Alfred Nobel could not simply have forgotten about mathematics, so he must have had a good reason for omitting it. With no obvious reason at hand, people invented one, and as usual the invented tale had a bit of salaciousness to it: Alfred Nobel deliberately avoided establishing a prize for mathematics out of vindictiveness because a prominent Swedish mathematician was carrying on an affair with his wife.

The "wife" theory is easily discounted, since Nobel was never married. Some variations of the legend claim it was Nobel's fiancée or mistress who was carrying on the affair, with her partner in infidelity identified as the eminent Swedish mathematician Gosta Mittag-Leffler. Nobel reportedly did have a mistress, a Viennese woman named Sophie Hess, but there is no evidence she ever had anything to do with Mittag-Leffler. Another version of the legend maintains that Nobel bore animosity towards Mittag-Leffler for some other reason, and he therefore avoided establishing a mathematics prize because Mittag-Leffler would almost certainly have been one of its first recipients. However, this version also has little factual evidence to support it, as: Okay then, so why did Alfred Nobel give mathematics a pass? There is no definitive answer since Nobel didn't explain his reasons, but there are several plausible possibilities: Whenever a man's motivations for a course of action aren't clear, attributing them to something sexual usually creates a tale both plausible and entertaining. Which is what urban legends are about, after all.

Last updated:   21 July 2007

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  Sources Sources:
    Gårding, Lars and Lars Hörmander.   "Why Is There No Nobel Prize in Mathematics?"
    The Mathematical Intelligencer.   Vol 7, No. 3; 1985   (pp. 73-74).

    Cooke, Roger.   The Mathematics of Sonya Kovalevskaya.
    New York: Springer-Verlag, 1984   (pp. 90-91).

    Crawford, Elisabeth.   The Beginnings of the Nobel Institution: The Science Prizes, 1901-1915.
    New York: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1984   (pp. 52-53).

    Halasz, Nicholas.   A Biography of Alfred Nobel.
    New York: Orion Press, 1959.