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Stephen Cole Kleene

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Mathematician

Name
  
Stephen Kleene


Doctoral advisor
  
Fields
  
Stephen Cole Kleene httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
January 5, 1909Hartford, Connecticut, US (
1909-01-05
)

Alma mater
  
Amherst CollegePrinceton University

Doctoral students
  
John Addison Jr.Paul AxtDouglas ClarkeRobert ConstableDavid KiersteadShih-Chao LiuJoan MoschovakisYiannis MoschovakisNels David NelsonGene RoseClifford SpectorRichard VesleyDick de Jongh

Died
  
January 25, 1994, Madison, Wisconsin, United States

Books
  
Introduction to Metamathematics, Mathematical Logic, Formalized Recursive Functionals and Formalized Realizability

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

Similar People
  
Alonzo Church, Kurt Godel, Yiannis N Moschovakis, J Barkley Rosser, Robert Lee Constable

Residence
  
United States of America

Stephen cole kleene


Stephen Cole Kleene (January 5, 1909 – January 25, 1994) was an American mathematician. One of the students of Alonzo Church, Kleene, along with Rózsa Péter, Alan Turing, Emil Post, and others, is best known as a founder of the branch of mathematical logic known as recursion theory, which subsequently helped to provide the foundations of theoretical computer science. Kleene's work grounds the study of which functions are computable. A number of mathematical concepts are named after him: Kleene hierarchy, Kleene algebra, the Kleene star (Kleene closure), Kleene's recursion theorem and the Kleene fixpoint theorem. He also invented regular expressions, and made significant contributions to the foundations of mathematical intuitionism.

Contents

Stephen Cole Kleene httpswwwnapeduopenbook0309062950xhtmlimag

Although his last name is commonly pronounced KLEE-nee or kleen, Kleene himself pronounced it KLAY-nee. His son, Ken Kleene, wrote: "As far as I am aware this pronunciation is incorrect in all known languages. I believe that this novel pronunciation was invented by my father."

Stephen Cole Kleene Top 18 Stephen Cole Kleene Quotes The American Mathematician YouTube

Top 18 Stephen Cole Kleene Quotes - The American Mathematician


Biography

Stephen Cole Kleene Stephen Cole Kleene

Kleene was awarded the BA degree from Amherst College in 1930. He was awarded the Ph.D. in mathematics from Princeton University in 1934. His thesis, entitled A Theory of Positive Integers in Formal Logic, was supervised by Alonzo Church. In the 1930s, he did important work on Church's lambda calculus. In 1935, he joined the mathematics department at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he spent nearly all of his career. After two years as an instructor, he was appointed assistant professor in 1937.

Stephen Cole Kleene Stephen Cole Kleene YouTube

While a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, 1939–40, he laid the foundation for recursion theory, an area that would be his lifelong research interest. In 1941, he returned to Amherst College, where he spent one year as an associate professor of mathematics.

Stephen Cole Kleene TOP 13 QUOTES BY STEPHEN COLE KLEENE AZ Quotes

During World War II, Kleene was a lieutenant commander in the United States Navy. He was an instructor of navigation at the U.S. Naval Reserve's Midshipmen's School in New York, and then a project director at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C.

Stephen Cole Kleene Kleene Introduction to Metamathematics

In 1946, Kleene returned to Wisconsin, becoming a full professor in 1948 and the Cyrus C. MacDuffee professor of mathematics in 1964. He was chair of the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, 1962–63, and Dean of the College of Letters and Science from 1969 to 1974. The latter appointment he took on despite the considerable student unrest of the day, stemming from the Vietnam War. He retired from the University of Wisconsin in 1979. In 1999 the mathematics library at the University of Wisconsin was renamed in his honor.

Kleene's teaching at Wisconsin resulted in three texts in mathematical logic, Kleene (1952, 1967) and Kleene and Vesley (1965). The first two are often cited and still in print. Kleene (1952) wrote alternative proofs to the Gödel's incompleteness theorems that enhanced their canonical status and made them easier to teach and understand. Kleene and Vesley (1965) is the classic American introduction to intuitionist logic and mathematics.

Kleene served as president of the Association for Symbolic Logic, 1956–58, and of the International Union of History and Philosophy of Science, 1961. In 1990, he was awarded the National Medal of Science. The importance of Kleene's work led to the saying that "Kleeneness is next to Gödelness".

Kleene and his wife Nancy Elliott had four children. He had a lifelong devotion to the family farm in Maine. An avid mountain climber, he had a strong interest in nature and the environment, and was active in many conservation causes.

Important publications

  • 1936. « General recursive functions of natural numbers », Math. Ann., 112, 727–742.
  • 1952. Introduction to Metamathematics. New York: Van Nostrand. (Ishi Press: 2009 reprint).
  • 1956. "Representation of Events in Nerve Nets and Finite Automata" in Automata Studies. Claude Shannon and John McCarthy, eds.
  • 1965 (with Richard Eugene Vesley). The Foundations of Intuitionistic Mathematics. North-Holland.
  • 1967. Mathematical Logic. John Wiley. Dover reprint, 2002. ISBN 0-486-42533-9.
  • 1981. "Origins of Recursive Function Theory" in Annals of the History of Computing 3, No. 1.
  • References

    Stephen Cole Kleene Wikipedia