Karl Willy Wagner | |
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Born | February 22, 1883 Friedrichsdorf, Hesse-Nassau, Germany |
Died | September 4, 1953 | (aged 70)
Residence | Germany |
Nationality | German |
Fields | Electrical engineering |
Alma mater | Technical University of Berlin |
Karl Willy Wagner (1883–1953) was a German pioneer in the theory of electronic filters. He is noted by Hendrik Bode as being one of two Germans whose;[1]
“ | . . . important contributions were slow to diffuse outside Germany because of the accidental intervention of World Wars I and II. | ” |
The other German being referred to is Wilhelm Cauer. Wagner was the second referee on Cauer's milestone 1926 thesis[2] but Wagner fell out with Cauer in 1942 after he refused to support Wagner's research proposals with the German Society of Electrical Engineers (Verband der Elektrotechnik - the VDE).[3]
Wagner was removed from office in 1936 because he refused to dismiss his Jewish employees.