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Helena Rasiowa

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Nationality
  
Role
  
Mathematician

Alma mater
  
University of Warsaw

Education
  
University of Warsaw


Fields
  
Name
  
Helena Rasiowa

Helena Rasiowa httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenffdHel

Born
  
June 20, 1917Vienna (
1917-06-20
)

Doctoral students
  
Michael BleicherAndrzej SalwickiJerzy TiurynDimiter VakarelovAnita Wasilewska

Died
  
August 9, 1994, Warsaw, Poland

Books
  
The mathematics of metamathematics

Doctoral advisor
  

Helena Rasiowa - A tribute to A. Mostowski


Helena Rasiowa (20 June 1917 – 9 August 1994) was a Polish mathematician. She worked in the foundations of mathematics and algebraic logic.

Contents

Helena Rasiowa Rasiowa Introduction to Modern Mathematics

Helena Rasiowa - biografia


Early years

Helena Rasiowa Helena Rasiowa

Rasiowa was born in Vienna on 20 June 1917 to Polish parents. As soon as Poland regained its independence in 1918, the family settled in Warsaw. Helena's father was a railway specialist. She exhibited many different skills and interests, from music to business management and the most important of her interests, mathematics. In 1938, the time was not very opportune for entering a university. Rasiowa had to interrupt her studies, as no legal education was possible in Poland after 1939. Many people fled the country, or at least they fled the big towns, which were subject to German bombardment and terror. The Rasiowa family fled also, as most high-ranking administration officials and members of the government were being evacuated to Romania. The family spent a year in Lvov. After a Soviet invasion in September 1939, the town was taken over by the Soviet Union. The lives of many Poles became endangered, so Helena's father decided to return to Warsaw.

Academic development

Helena Rasiowa Helena Rasiowa

Rasiowa became strongly influenced by Polish logicians. She wrote her Master's thesis under the supervision of Jan Łukasiewicz and Bolesław Sobociński. In 1944, the Warsaw Uprising broke out and consequently Warsaw was almost completely destroyed. This was not only due to the immediate fighting, but also because of the systematic destruction which followed the uprising after it had been suppressed. Rasiowa's thesis burned with the whole house. She herself survived with her mother in a cellar covered by the ruins of the demolished building.

Helena Rasiowa Konferencja ladami Kobiet w matematyce derfotograf

After the war, Polish mathematics began to recover its institutions, its moods, and its people. Those who remained considered their duty to be the reconstruction of Polish universities and the scientific community. One of the important conditions for this reconstruction was to gather all those who could participate in re-creating mathematics. In the meantime, Rasiowa had accepted a teaching position in a secondary school. That is where she met Andrzej Mostowski and came back to the University. She re-wrote her Master's thesis in 1945 and in the next year she started her academic career as an assistant at the University of Warsaw, the institution she remained linked with for the rest of her life.

Helena Rasiowa Family Photographs

At the University, she prepared and defended her PhD thesis, Algebraic Treatment of the Functional Calculi of Lewis and Heyting, in 1950 under the guidance of Prof. Andrzej Mostowski. This paper pointed to the main field of Rasiowa's future research: algebraic methods in logic. In 1956, she took her second academic degree, doktor nauk (equivalent to habilitation today) in the Institute of Mathematics of the Polish Academy of Sciences, where between 1954 and 1957, she held a post of Associate Professor, becoming a Professor in 1957 and subsequently Full Professor in 1967. For the degree, she submitted two papers, Algebraic Models of Axiomatic Theories and Constructive Theories, which together formed a thesis named Algebraic Models of Elementary Theories and their Applications.

Works

Helena Rasiowa Trends in Logic III

  • The Mathematics of Metamathematics (1963, together with Roman Sikorski)
  • An Algebraic Approach to Non-Classical Logics (1974)

  • Helena Rasiowa Family Photographs

    References

    Helena Rasiowa Wikipedia