The intent of this project is to compile information about ALL
the mathematicians of the world. We earnestly solicit information from all
schools who participate in the development of research level mathematics
and from all individuals who may know desired information.
Please notice: Throughout this project
when we use the word "mathematics" or "mathematician" we mean that word in
a very inclusive sense. Thus, all relevant data from statistics, or
computer science or operations research is welcome.
In the following paragraphs we shall try to outline our goals and our
underlying philosophy for the GENEALOGY PROJECT. It is our goal to
list all individuals who have received a doctorate in mathematics. For
each individual we plan to show the following:
- The complete name of the degree recipient
- The name of the university which awarded the degree
- The year in which the degree was awarded
- The complete title of the dissertation
- The complete name(s) of the advisor(s)
Please note:
For the earlier periods the advisor/advisee relationship may not have been
nearly so formal as it is in modern times. Thus, the links shown for those
periods may reflect a mentor/student circumstance that is somewhat
different than the links for more recent decades. Please remember: We are
trying to help trace the intellectual history of our subject. Moreover, we
acknowledge that the model we are using may well be anachronistic for the
earlier periods.
Each of the five items can potentially be troublesome. Consider the
name. Most of our data comes from either the university or the
Dissertation Abstracts. Neither source is perfect. Moreover, in
some instances the name that was recorded in the archives at the time the
degree was awarded is not the name by which the individual is known today.
When we are aware of such a shift, e.g., a change due to marriage, a
change in the choice of the individual's preference or, perhaps, a revised
spelling; then we try to accomodate the change. Sometimes we have for
historical completeness chosen to show the entire name. See, for example,
E. H. Moore, where on his page we also show Eliakim Hastings. If a person
routinely uses a middle name instead of the first name and we are aware of
this, then we show the name as in the following example: C. Felix Klein
and on his page we show Christian. See the paragraph below for tips on
searching.
The name of the institution is also subject to change. For the most
part we tend to show the name by which the institution is known today.
Thus the diploma that was given to Carl E. Langenhop showed the awarding
institution was Iowa State College; we show this school as Iowa State
University.
We would like to show the year in which the degree was awarded.
However, some sources show the year according to when the notification was
received. When so informed we will try to correct this sort of error.
We would like to give the complete dissertation title for everybody.
However, currently our ability is limited by certain technical
considerations. As these are resolved there may be more detail in the
titles. Please help us by sending us corrections when the titles are
incomplete or contain undecoded TEX code or other errors.
We try to show complete names. If, however, the name by which you know
a person does not appear in a search on last and first names then try
entering the name as a middle name. We try to put all names, which a
person may have used at one time, in the "middle name" field. If a
person's name contains a letter other that the twenty-six which are
available we try to show the name correctly. However, under these
circumstances when one enters a request one is limited. In these
circumstances try using the alphabetical search by the first two letters
or by a string of letters not involving the problem character. For
instance the name "Müller" can not be entered. Try entering the string
"ller". Similarly, if you recall that someone attended a university with
"south" as part of the name but you don't recall whether it was South
Carolina or South Florida or South Africa... simply enter the string
"south" as the school. You will, of course, receive many listings, thus at
least a partial name, first, last or middle, may help to refine the
search.
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