Kazimierz Kuratowski

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kazimierz Kuratowski
Kazimierz Kuratowski

Contents

Kazimierz Kuratowski (Warsaw, February 2, 1896June 18, 1980) was a Polish mathematician and logician.

[edit] Biography

Kuratowski was born a subject of Czarist Russia. In 1913, he enrolled in an engineering course at the University of Glasgow in Scotland, in part because he did not wish to study in Russian. He had completed only one year of study when the outbreak of World War I precluded any further enrollment. In 1915, Kuratowksi restarted his university education at the University of Warsaw, this time in mathematics, obtaining the Ph.D. in 1921. Thus engineering's loss became an enormous gain to mathematics.

He was appointed professor of mathematics in 1927 at the Lwów Polytechnic in Lwów, Poland, and from 1934 at Warsaw University. In 1945 he became a member of the Polish Academy of Learning, and in 1952 of the Polish Academy of Sciences. From 1948 until 1967 he was director of the Institute of Mathematics of the Polish Academy of Sciences, and he was also a long-time chairman of the Polish and International Mathematics Societies. His students include Andrzej Mostowski.

Kazimierz Kuratowski was one of a celebrated group of Polish mathematicians who would meet at Lwów's Kawiarnia Szkocka (Scottish Café).

[edit] Research

Kuratowski's research was mainly focused on abstract topological and metric structures. With Alfred Tarski and Wacław Sierpiński he provided most of the theory concerning Polish spaces[1] (that are indeed named after these mathematicians and their legacy). His contributions to mathematics also include:

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Kazimierz Kuratowski, A Half Century of Polish Mathematics: Remembrances and Reflections, Oxford, Pergamon Press, 1980, ISBN 0-08-023046-6.
  • Karol Borsuk, "On the Achievements of Prof. Dr. Kazimierz Kuratowski in Topology" (in Polish), Wiadomości matematyczne, vol. 2, no. 3, 1960, pp. 231-237.

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ See for instance the Kuratowski theorem in the Standard Borel spaces and Kuratowski theorems section of the article Borel algebra.