Galileo and Newton's work towards the mathematisation of the physical
world; Leibniz's universal logical calculus; the Enlightenment's
mathématique sociale. John von Neumann inherited all these aims and
philosophical intuitions, together with an idea that grew up around the
Vienna Circle of an ethics in the form of an exact science capable of
guiding individuals to make correct decisions. With the help of his
boundless mathematical capacity, von Neumann developed a conception of
the world as a mathematical game, a world globally governed by a
universal logic in which individual consciousness moved following
different strategies: his vision guided him from set theory to quantum
mechanics, to economics and to his theory of automata (anticipating
artificial intelligence and cognitive science). This book provides the
first comprehensive scientific and intellectual biography of John von
Neumann, a man who perhaps more than any other is representative of
twentieth century science.