Fierz's father Hans Eduard Fierz was a chemist with Geigy and later a professor at ETH Zurich, his mother was Linda Fierz-David. Fierz studied at the Realgymnasium in Zurich. In 1931 he began his studies in Göttingen, where he listened to the lectures of prolific academics including Hermann Weyl. In 1933 he returned to Zurich and studied physics at ETH under Wolfgang Pauli and Gregor Wentzel. In 1936 he earned a doctoral degree with his thesis on the infrared catastrophe in quantum electrodynamics.[1] Afterward he went to Werner Heisenberg in Leipzig and in 1936 became an assistant to Wolfgang Pauli in Zurich. For his habilitation degree in 1939 he treated in his thesis relativistic fields with arbitrary spins (with and without mass)[2] and proved the Spin-statistics theorem for free fields.[3] For quantum electrodynamics the work was extended.[4] The work on relativistic fields with arbitrary spins was later important in supergravity. In 1940 he became Privatdozent in Basel and 1943 assistant professor. From 1944 to 1959 he was a professor for theoretical physics in Basel. In 1950 he was at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, where he met Res Jost. In 1959 he led the theoretical physics department at CERN in Geneva for one year and in 1960 he became the successor of his teacher Pauli at ETH. In 1977 he retired there as an emeritus professor. Fierz also worked on gravitational theory but published only one paper on the subject.
In 1940 he married Menga Biber; they became acquainted through making music (he played the violin). Their marriage produced two sons.[citation needed][5]
Fierz, M. (1949). ""Title" Zur Theorie der Multipolstrahlung". Helv. Phys. Acta. 22: 489.
Fierz, M. (1956). "Über die physikalische Deutung der erweiterten Gravitationstheorie P. Jordans". Helv. Phys. Acta. 29: 128.
M. Fierz, ’Spinors’, in Proceedings of the International Conference on Relativistic Theories of Gravitation, London, July 1965, H. Bondi ed., Kings College, University of London, 1965
Fierz, M. (1964). "Warum gibt es keine magnetischen Ladungen?". Helv. Phys. Acta. 37: 663.