Bernays was born into a distinguished
German-Jewish family of scholars and businessmen. His great-grandfather,
Isaac ben Jacob Bernays, served as chief rabbi of Hamburg from 1821 to 1849. Bernays spent his childhood in Berlin, and attended the
Köllnische Gymnasium, 1895–1907. At the
University of Berlin, he studied mathematics under
Issai Schur,
Edmund Landau,
Ferdinand Georg Frobenius, and
Friedrich Schottky; philosophy under
Alois Riehl,
Carl Stumpf and
Ernst Cassirer; and physics under
Max Planck. At the
University of Göttingen, he studied mathematics under
David Hilbert,
Edmund Landau,
Hermann Weyl, and
Felix Klein; physics under
Woldemar Voigt and
Max Born; and philosophy under
Leonard Nelson. In 1912, the
University of Berlin awarded him a Ph.D. in mathematics for a thesis, supervised by Landau, on the
analytic number theory of
binary quadratic forms. That same year, the
University of Zurich awarded him
habilitation for a thesis on
complex analysis and
Picard's theorem. The examiner was
Ernst Zermelo. Bernays was Privatdozent at the University of Zurich, 1912–1917, where he came to know
George Pólya. His collected communications with
Kurt Gödel span many decades. Starting in 1917,
David Hilbert employed Bernays to assist him with his investigations of the foundation of arithmetic. Bernays also lectured on other areas of mathematics at the University of Göttingen. In 1918, that university awarded him a second habilitation for a thesis on the axiomatics of the
propositional calculus of
Principia Mathematica. In 1922, Göttingen appointed Bernays extraordinary professor without tenure. His most successful student there was
Gerhard Gentzen. After Nazi Germany enacted the
Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service in 1933, the university fired Bernays because of his Jewish ancestry. After working privately for Hilbert for six months, Bernays and his family moved to
Switzerland, whose nationality he had inherited from his father, and where the
ETH Zurich employed him on occasion. He also visited the
University of Pennsylvania and was a visiting scholar at the
Institute for Advanced Study in 1935–36 and again in 1959–60. ==Mathematical work==