> Human: After the defeat, many professors with Pan-Germanistic leanings, who by that time constituted the majority of the faculty, considered it pretty much their duty to protect the institutions of higher learning from “undesirables.” The most likely to be dismissed were young scholars who had not yet earned the right to teach university classes. As for female scholars, well, they had no place in the system at all; nothing was clearer than that.
> Google: After the lost war, many German-National professors, meanwhile the majority in the faculty, saw themselves as their duty to keep the universities from the “odd”; Young scientists were most vulnerable before their habilitation. And scientists did not question anyway; There were few of them.
> DeepL: After the lost war, many German national professors, now the majority of the faculty, regarded it as their duty to protect the universities from the "oddities"; the most defenceless were young scientists from their habilitation. And women scientists were not questioned anyway; there was little agreement on a few things.
I'd say the DeepL translation is slightly better. It still misses most of the points.
> Google: After the lost war, many German-National professors, meanwhile the majority in the faculty, saw themselves as their duty to keep the universities from the “odd”; Young scientists were most vulnerable before their habilitation. And scientists did not question anyway; There were few of them.
> DeepL: After the lost war, many German national professors, now the majority of the faculty, regarded it as their duty to protect the universities from the "oddities"; the most defenceless were young scientists from their habilitation. And women scientists were not questioned anyway; there was little agreement on a few things.
I'd say the DeepL translation is slightly better. It still misses most of the points.