'Garrett Birkhoff' (
January 19,
1911,
Princeton, New Jersey,
USA –
November 22,
1996,
Water Mill,
New York, USA) was an
American mathematician.
The son of the mathematician
George David Birkhoff, Garrett began the
Harvard University BA course in 1928 after less than seven years of prior formal education. Upon completing his Harvard BA in 1932, he went to
Cambridge University in
England to study
mathematical physics but switched to studying
abstract algebra under
Philip Hall. While visiting the
University of Munich, he met
Carathéodory who pointed him towards two important texts,
Van der Waerden on
abstract algebra and Speiser on
group theory.
Birkhoff held no Ph.D., a qualification British higher education did not emphasize at that time, and did not even bother obtaining an MA. Nevertheless, after being a member Harvard's
Society of Fellows,1933-36, he spent the rest of his career teaching at Harvard. From these facts can be inferred the number and quality of Birkhoff's papers published by his 25th year.
During the 1930s, Birkhoff, along with his Harvard colleagues
Marshall Stone and
Saunders MacLane, substantially advanced American teaching and research in
abstract algebra. In
1941 he and MacLane published ''A Survey of Modern Algebra'', the first undergraduate textbook in English on the subject. Birkhoff and MacLane (1967) is a more advanced text on
abstract algebra. A number of papers he wrote in the 1930s, culminating in his monograph, ''Lattice Theory'' (1940; the third edition remains in print), turned
lattice theory into a major branch of
abstract algebra. His
1935 paper, "On the Structure of Abstract Algebras" founded a new branch of mathematics,
universal algebra. Birkhoff's approach to this subject owed little to
Alfred North Whitehead's 1898 monograph bearing the same name.
During and after
World War II, Birkhoff's interests gravitated towards what he called "engineering" mathematics. During the war, he worked on radar aiming and ballistics. This weapons-related work culminated in his texts on fluid dynamics, ''Hydrodynamics'' (1950) and ''Jets, Wakes and Cavities'' (1957). Birkhoff, a friend of
John von Neumann, took a close interest in the rise of the electronic computer. His research and consulting work (notably for
General Motors) began to employ computational methods, such as numerical linear algebra and the representation of smooth curves via
cubic splines.
Birkhoff published more than 200 papers and
supervised more than 50 Ph.Ds. He was a member of the
National Academy of Sciences and the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Selected books by
★ 1967 (1940). ''Lattice Theory, 3rd ed''. American Mathematical Society.
★ 1997 (1941) (with
Saunders Mac Lane). ''A Survey of Modern Algebra''. A K Peters. ISBN 1-56881-068-7
★ 1978 (1950). ''Hydrodynamics: A study in logic, fact, and similitude ''. Greenwood Press.
★ 1957 (with E. Zarantello). ''Jets, Wakes, and Cavities''. Academic Press.
★ 1989 (1962) (with
Gian-Carlo Rota). ''Ordinary Differential Equations''. John Wiley.
★ 1999 (1967) (with
Saunders Mac Lane). ''Algebra''. Chelsea. ISBN 0-8218-1646-2
★ 1970 (with Thomas Bartee). ''Modern Applied Algebra''. McGraw-Hill.
★ 1973. ''Source Book in Classical Analysis''. Harvard Uni. Press.
External link
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