Henri Daniel Rathgeber was an Australian physicist who studied cosmic rays but considered his most important contribution to be an economic theory that explain how entropy causes unemployment.
Background
Rathgeber was born in Paris, Montmartre on 11 June 1908. His father, Daniel Rathgeber was German, working for Robert Bosch GmbH, and his mother Hortense Desmousseaux was French. Just before the outbreak of first world war, he moved to Bad Dürkheim with his French mother, while his father served in the German army.
Education
In 1934 he completed an undergraduate degree at the Technische Hochschule in Stuttgart and in 1938 completed his doctorate in physics.
Career
From 1919-1924 he lived in Geneva, Switzerland and went to school at the College. Rathgeber played an important part in Erich Regener"s balloon experiments, as he was the only student at that time who owned a car, and was therefore asked to collect the balloons and measuring apparatus, which could travel up to a distance of 200 km from Stuttgart. Professor Erich Regener"s family lived in an apartment directly above the physics lecture room, and Rathgeber was struck by a tall, elegant young woman who would often be seen using the staircase.
This was Erich Regener"s daughter, Erika, who Rathgeber married on the 2 August 1932.
Rathgeber was heavily influenced by the economic ideas of Silvio Gesell which were popular in Germany at the time. During the war he worked as a part-time research physicist with the Optical Munitions Panel.
In 1940 he obtained the Thomas Lyle fellowship in physics at the University of Melbourne. Rathgeber retired in 1973 and in retirement returned to his earlier interest in economics and its connection with physics and in particular entropy and control system design.
In 1974 he developed a theory explaining how random noise in the form of an error rate, as defined in Claude Shannon"s information theory causes an inverse linear relationship between unemployment and inflation, but at the time such ideas were not taken seriously.
Rathgeber continued to write various unpublished papers about his theory. He died in Sydney in 1995.