Adolf Lindenbaum
Adolf Lindenbaum | |
---|---|
Born | Warsaw, Poland | June 12, 1904
Died | August 1941 Naujoji Vilnia, Lithuania | (aged 37)
Nationality | Polish |
Alma mater | University of Warsaw |
Known for | Lindenbaum–Tarski algebra, Lindenbaum's lemma |
Spouse | Janina Hosiasson-Lindenbaum |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Logic, mathematics |
Institutions | University of Warsaw |
Thesis | On metric properties of point sets (1928) |
Doctoral advisor | Wacław Sierpiński |
Adolf Lindenbaum (12 June 1904[1] – August 1941) was a Polish-Jewish logician and mathematician best known for Lindenbaum's lemma and Lindenbaum–Tarski algebras.
Life
[edit]He was born and brought up in Warsaw. He earned a Ph.D. in 1928 under Wacław Sierpiński and habilitated at the University of Warsaw in 1934. He published works on mathematical logic, set theory, cardinal and ordinal arithmetic, the axiom of choice, the continuum hypothesis, theory of functions, measure theory, point-set topology, geometry and real analysis. He served as an assistant professor at the University of Warsaw from 1935 until the outbreak of war in September 1939. He was Alfred Tarski's closest collaborator of the inter-war period. Around the end of October or beginning of November 1935 he married Janina Hosiasson, a fellow logician of the Lwow–Warsaw school. He and his wife were adherents of logical empiricism, participated in and contributed to the international unity of science movement, and were members of the original Vienna Circle. Sometime before the middle of August 1941 he and his sister Stefanja were shot to death in Naujoji Vilnia (Nowa Wilejka), 7 km east of Vilnius, by the occupying German forces or Lithuanian collaborators.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ Zygmunt, Jan; Purdy, Robert (2014-12-01). "Adolf Lindenbaum: Notes on his Life, with Bibliography and Selected References" (PDF). Logica Universalis. 8 (3–4): 285–320. doi:10.1007/s11787-014-0108-2. ISSN 1661-8297. S2CID 33968008.
- ^ Purdy, Robert; Zygmunt, Jan (2018-06-29). "Adolf Lindenbaum, Metric Spaces and Decompositions". The Lvov–Warsaw School. Past and Present, ed. by Ángel Garrido and Urszula Wybraniec-Skardowska, Birkhäuser: Basel 2018, p. 518. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-65430-0_36. ISSN 2297-0282.
External links
[edit]- Adolf Lindenbaum entry at The Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy by Jan Woleński (includes a portrait)
- An Open Access article on Lindenbaum's life and works in Logica Universalis, Volume 8, Issue 3–4 (December 2014), pp 285–320 [note: the authors revisited the life of Adolf Lindenbaum in light of new research findings in a later non Open Access paper here.
- Page on Sierpinski, contains fragments of his memoirs mentioning the murder of Lindenbaum
- O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Adolf Lindenbaum", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
- 1904 births
- 1941 deaths
- 20th-century Polish philosophers
- 20th-century Polish mathematicians
- Polish logicians
- Polish Jews who died in the Holocaust
- Polish set theorists
- Polish people executed by Nazi Germany
- Scientists from Warsaw
- Victims of the Ponary massacre
- Executed people from Masovian Voivodeship
- Vienna Circle
- Polish mathematician stubs