---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Prashanth <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2013 23:01:44 +0530
Subject: (VIB) Abraham Nemeth, Creator of a Braille Code for Math, Is
Dead at 94:
To:

At the outset, My heart felt condolence to this genius personality.

By
WILLIAM YARDLEY
Published: October 6, 2013

Abraham Nemeth, whose frustrations in pursuing an academic career in
math prompted him to develop the Nemeth Code, a form of Braille that
greatly improved the ability of visually impaired people to study
complex mathematics, died on Wednesday at his home in Southfield,
Mich. He was 94.
The cause was congestive heart failure, his niece Dianne Bekritsky said.

Blind since he was an infant, Dr. Nemeth grew up on the Lower East
Side of Manhattan, the grandson of a kosher butcher. He was a bright
child who taught himself to play the piano using Braille music books
and was increasingly drawn to what he later called "the beauty of
mathematics."

Yet as his math skills increased, he found that Braille could take him
only so far. It was too easy to confuse letters and numbers in certain
situations and too cumbersome to constantly clarify. The more
complicated math became, the more limited Braille became.

"There was no way of doing square roots, partial differentials, et
cetera," said Joyce Hull, who worked with Dr. Nemeth for many years,
refining and writing manuals for his code. "That's one of the reasons
they said, 'No, blind people can't do math.' "

Dr. Nemeth knew that they could. Even as college advisers steered him
in other directions - he earned his master's in psychology from
Columbia in 1942 - he began tinkering with the six-dot cell that is
the foundation of Braille. By the late 1940s, while working in the
shipping department of the American Foundation for the Blind (and
playing piano in Brooklyn bars to make extra money), he had come up
with a customized Braille code for math; he made symbols for the
basics of addition and subtraction but also for the complexities of
differential calculus. He even made a Braille slide rule.

He began informally sharing his new symbols with others, and the code
quickly caught on. In 1950, he presented it to the American Joint
Uniform Braille Committee. By the mid-1950s, the Nemeth Code had been
adopted by national groups and incorporated into textbooks, providing
him with a new career. In 1955, he was hired by the University of
Detroit to teach math - to sighted students, using a chalkboard.

It helped that as a young man, he had learned to write in straight
lines even though he could not see. He had also developed a long
memory.

"The first line of writing goes at the top of the board - level with
the top of my head," he said in a 1958 interview with Coronet
magazine. "The next line is at my eye level, the third at chin level,
the one after that at chest level. You just work down."

Well into his 90s, he was traveling frequently to speak to advocates
for the blind and join in discussions over changes in Braille code. He
was also constantly working to improve Braille, both for math and
non-math uses, Ms. Hull said, responding just recently when she sent
him queries for a manual.

Abraham Nemeth was born in Manhattan on Oct. 16, 1918. He attended
public schools and grew up in a devout Jewish household, often
attending worship services with his grandfather.

Dr. Nemeth frequently gave credit to his first wife, the former
Florence Weissman, who was partly blind, for encouraging him to pursue
his passion for math when he had trouble finding a job in which he
could use his psychology degree. When he re-entered Columbia to study
math, she worked to help pay his tuition. She died in 1970. Dr.
Nemeth's second wife, Edna Lazar, is also deceased. He has no
immediate survivors.

Dr. Nemeth received his doctorate in mathematics from Wayne State
University in Detroit. He began studying computer science in the 1960s
and later started the university's computer science program. He
retired in 1985. For two years he served as the chairman of the
Michigan Commission for the Blind.

Throughout his life, he dedicated much of his spare time to creating
Braille versions of Jewish texts, including helping to proofread a
Braille Hebrew Bible in the 1950s. He also helped develop MathSpeak, a
method for communicating math orally.

Dr. Cary Supalo, a professor at Illinois State University who is blind
and works to make science and science laboratories accessible to the
blind, said Dr. Nemeth was revered among educators focused on the
blind.

"If I had to do what Dr. Nemeth did, to basically invent his own
Braille system for doing mathematics, I probably wouldn't have pursued
a science career," he said.

Dr. Marc Maurer, the president of the National Federation of the
Blind, said in a statement that Dr. Nemeth's work "undoubtedly changed
many lives." The Nemeth Code, he said, "enabled many blind people to
learn, work and excel in science, technology, engineering and
mathematics."

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/07/us/abraham-nemeth-creator-of-a-braille-code-for-math-is-dead-at-94.html?_r=3&;

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-- 
Avinash Shahi
M.Phil Research Scholar
Centre for The Study of Law and Governance
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi India

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