Now on ScienceBlogs: HeartlandGate: Anti-Science Institute's Insider Reveals Secrets

ScienceBlogs Book Club: Inside the Outbreaks

Search

rss.jpg   Subscribe to RSS feed

Follow dabacon on Twitter

Profile

davidog.pngDave Bacon is a theoretical ski bum who is also a pseudo professor. His research is on quantum computing, his scientific passions extend to everything in physics, mathematics, computer science and beyond, and his personal pleasures include making wine, playing poker, skiing, camping, and daydreaming (although not all of those at the same time.) Nothing he says on this blog should be construed as having anything to do with his employer or his dog.


Recent Comments

Recent Posts

Other Information

The use of Occam's razor on this website is strickly prohibited.

Cows are well approximated by a sphere.
rss.jpg   Subscribe to RSS feed

Follow dabacon on Twitter

« Quantum Computing Room on Friendfeed | Main | Will the Real Reason For Quantum Theory Please Stand Up? »

Closed Timelike Mathematicians

Category: Funny Ha HaMathematics
Posted on: August 1, 2008 7:40 PM, by Dave Bacon

Share:

John Baez points to a remarkable mathematician (having being lead there by Alissa Crans):


You may have heard of the Mathematics Genealogy Project. This is a wonderful database that lets you look up the Ph.D. advisor and students of almost any mathematician. This is how I traced back my genealogy to Gauss back in week166.

I was feeling pretty proud of myself, too -- until I found someone who had two Ph.D. students before he was even born!

Yes indeed: our friend and café regular Tom Leinster is listed as having two Ph.D. students: Jose Cruz in 1959, and Steven Sample in 1965. At the time he was teaching at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Later he took an extended sabbatical, got born in England, and transferred to kindergarten. After a lively second career as a youth, he returned to academia and got his Ph.D. at Cambridge under Martin Hyland in 2000. He now has a permanent position at the University of Glasgow. But who can say what he'll do next?

Check it out soon, since it may go away.

And yes I posted this just so I could used the words "closed timelike mathematicians."

Share on Facebook
Share on StumbleUpon
Share on Facebook

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/77890

Comments

1

Interesting, but my ancestry stops dead at Sir Arthur Eddington who never took a doctorate :-(

Posted by: csrster | August 2, 2008 3:26 AM

2

Neat, I trance my ancestry back to Euler via Lagrange and Fourier!

Posted by: Pieter Kok | August 2, 2008 8:46 AM

3

csrster:

Cool! You can trace yourself back to Eddington?? I wrote my PhD thesis on Eddington's Fundamental Theory and have written a number of papers on his work.

Dave:

There seems to be a theme in the blogosphere lately since Aaronson just posted something that involved the words 'closed time-like.'

Posted by: Ian Durham | August 2, 2008 9:50 AM

4

In several disciplines, it is stanrad practice to tell students who their teacher's teachers' teachers' were, such as in Music, Theatre, Martial Arts. In others, it depends on how illustrious in the lineage, or how people-oriented the teacher. Note also that one's social network (a la Erdos number) of coauthors, coauthors' coathors, and the like, can go back far into one's past. Light cone =/= ink cone.

PROFESSIONAL "GENEOLOGY": MY TEACHERS' TEACHERS' TEACHERS

Posted by: Jonathan Vos Post | August 2, 2008 11:49 AM

5

Luckily my genealogy was updated recently (meaning my "ancestors" updated themselves). The furthest back I can go, though, is William Hodge at Cambridge who was Michael Atiyah's advisor (from whom I am "descended").

Posted by: Ian Durham | August 2, 2008 4:33 PM

6

"...until I found someone who had two Ph.D. students before he was even born!"

Isn't this just being true to quantum weirdness? (And maybe true to relativity, now that I think about it.)

Posted by: JohnQPublic | August 2, 2008 6:23 PM

Comments have been closed as this blog has moved to http://dabacon.org/pontiff.
Click here to search for this post on the new blog.

ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Follow ScienceBlogs on Twitter

© 2006-2011 ScienceBlogs LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of ScienceBlogs LLC. All rights reserved.