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Julian Coolidge

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Julian Coolidge

Institutions
  
Harvard University

Role
  
Mathematician


Doctoral advisor
  
Eduard Study

Influenced
  
Franklin D. Roosevelt

Fields
  
Mathematics

Julian Coolidge wwwmathharvardeduhistorycoolidges0001bjpg

Alma mater
  
Harvard University Oxford University

Died
  
March 5, 1954, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

Education
  
Harvard University, University of Oxford, Balliol College, University of Bonn

Books
  
A history of geometrical methods, A Treatise on Algebraic, The elements of non‑Eucli, The mathematics of great a, A Treatise on the Circle an

Similar People
  
Franklin D Roosevelt, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Endicott Peabody, Theodore Roosevelt, Henry George

Doctoral students
  
Roger Arthur Johnson

Julian Lowell Coolidge (September 28, 1873 – March 5, 1954) was an American mathematician and a professor and chairman of the Harvard University Mathematics Department.

Contents

Julian Coolidge TOP 5 QUOTES BY JULIAN COOLIDGE AZ Quotes

Biography

Born in Brookline, Massachusetts, he graduated from Harvard University and Oxford University.

Between 1897 and 1899 Julian Coolidge taught at the Groton School where one of his students was Franklin D. Roosevelt. He left the private school to accept a teaching position at Harvard and in 1902 was given an assistant professorship, but took two years off to further his education with studies in Turin, Italy before receiving his doctorate from the University of Bonn. Julian Coolidge then returned to teach at Harvard where he remained for his entire academic career, interrupted only by a year at the Sorbonne in Paris as an exchange professor.

During World War I, he served with the U.S. Army's Overseas Expeditionary Force in France, rising to the rank of major. At the end of the war, the government of France awarded him the Legion of Honor.

Coolidge returned to teach at Harvard where he was awarded a full professorship. In 1927 he was appointed chairman of the Mathematics Department at Harvard, a position he held until his retirement in 1940. A Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Coolidge served as president of the Mathematical Association of America and vice-president of the American Mathematical Society. He authored several books on mathematics and on the history of mathematics.

Julian Coolidge died in 1954 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, aged 80.

Writings

  • J. L. Coolidge (1909) The elements of non-Euclidean geometry, Oxford University Press.
  • J. L. Coolidge (1916) A treatise on the circle and the sphere, Oxford University Press.
  • J. L. Coolidge (1924) The geometry of the complex domain, The Clarendon Press.
  • J. L. Coolidge (1925) An introduction to mathematical probability, Oxford University Press.
  • J. L. Coolidge (1931) A Treatise on Algebraic Plane Curves, Oxford University Press (Dover Publications 2004).
  • J. L. Coolidge (1940) A history of geometrical methods, Oxford University Press (Dover Publications 2003).
  • J. L. Coolidge (1945) History of the conic sections and quadric surfaces, The Clarendon Press.
  • J. L. Coolidge (1949) The Mathematics Of Great Amateurs, Oxford University Press (Dover Publications 1963).
  • References

    Julian Coolidge Wikipedia