HeimsS.J.Von Neumann: only human in spite of himself. In: Campbell DouglasM., Higgins JohnC. (eds). Mathematics. People. Problems. Results. Vol. I.Belmont: Wadsworth International, 1984; p. 218. This article is an excerpt from Heims SJ: John von Neumann and Norbert Wiener — From Mathematics to the Technologies of Life and Death. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1980; pp. 363–371.
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HalmosP.R.The legend of John von Neumann. American Mathematical Monthly1973; 80: 382–394.
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HeimsS.J., op. cit., 219.
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StoneM.H.A review of John von Neumann and Norbert Wiener, from Mathematics to the Technologies of Life and Death, by Steve J. Heims. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society1983; 812: 395–399.
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EdwardTeller spoke these words in the film John von Neumann. His statement is cited here from Heims SJ, op. cit., 218.
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WignerE.Symmetries and Reflections.Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1967; p. 261. This statement of E. Wigner written in 1957 is quoted here from Heims SJ, op. cit., 219.
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ThomasD.Do not go gentle into that good night. In: WilliamsO. (ed). The Golden Treasury of the Best Songs and Lyrical Poems.New York: New American Library, 1961; p. 523.
L Tolstoy asked: “And the mujiks? How do the mujiks die?” Tolstoy L “Three Deaths” from The Death of Ivan Ilyitch and Other Stories. Works of Lyof N. Tolstoy. New York, 1989: vol. XI; p. 81.
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ArièsP.Western Attitudes Toward Death: From the Middle Ages to the Present.Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1974; pp. 1–25.
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SolzhenitzenA.Cancer Ward.New York, 1969; pp. 96–97.
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Evans-WentzW.Y. (ed). The Tibetan Book of the Dead.London: Oxford University Press, 1960; p. xv.