The Unreal Life of Oscar Zariski

Oscar Zariski's work in mathematics permanently altered the foundations of algebraic geometry. The powerful tools he forged from the ideas of modern algebra allowed him to penetrate classical problems with an unaccustomed depth, and brought new rigor to the intuitive proofs of the Italian Schoo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Parikh, Carol
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: New York, NY Springer New York 2009, 2009
Edition:1st ed. 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a The Unreal Life of Oscar Zariski  |h Elektronische Ressource  |c by Carol Parikh 
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300 |a XXII, 194 p. 46 illus  |b online resource 
505 0 |a That Darling Old Lady Kobrin and Chernigov 1899– 1918 -- Birds Whirling like Numbers Kiev 1918–1920 -- Three Great Mathematicians Rome 1921–1926 -- Reading Pushkin and Dante -- “Oscar, You Are Not One of Us.” -- Walking with Lefschetz Baltimore 1927–1928 -- A Voyage of Discovery 1928–1932 -- “The Algebra Which Sheds Light on Geometry” 1932–1935 -- A Citizen of the World of Mathematics 1935–1937 -- The Resolution of Some Singularities -- A Land of Intellectual Cannibals 1939–1944 -- “A Superb Audience of One … André Weil” São Paulo 1945 -- Normal Points of a Variety Cambridge 1947 -- The Pure Pleasure of It -- An Attack on the Theory of Linear Systems 1950–1956 -- Tying Bells on Characteristic Zero 1957–1961 -- A Feeling of Awe 1962–1974 -- The Depth of His Attachment 
653 |a Algebraic Geometry 
653 |a History of Mathematical Sciences 
653 |a History 
653 |a Algebraic geometry 
653 |a Mathematics 
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520 |a Oscar Zariski's work in mathematics permanently altered the foundations of algebraic geometry. The powerful tools he forged from the ideas of modern algebra allowed him to penetrate classical problems with an unaccustomed depth, and brought new rigor to the intuitive proofs of the Italian School. The students he trained at John Hopkins, and later at Harvard, are among the foremost mathematicians of our time. While what he called his "real life" is recorded in almost a hundred books and papers, this story of his "unreal life" is based upon Parikh's interviews with his family, colleagues, and students, and on his own memories from a series of tape-recorded interviews made a few years before his death in 1986. First published in 1991, The Unreal Life of Oscar Zariski was highly successful and widely praised, but has been out of print for many years. Springer is proud to make this book available again, introducing Oscar Zariski to a new generation of mathematicians.  
520 |a We see his humanity in his love for his family and the care he devoted to his students...All this and more in Carol Parikh's prize-winning English prose make this book a delight to read." - Robin Hartshorne, American Mathematical Monthly 
520 |a About this book: "I want to express my appreciation to you for having penetrated so deeply into the many-faceted aspects of a complex and mercurial life." - Yole Zariski, Oscar Zariski's wife "...an attractive book that recreates one of the great mathematical personalities of our century. Both mathematicians and nonspecialists will enjoy it." - Doru Stefanescu, Mathematical Reviews "Carol Parikh's perceptive narrative of the life of Oscar Zariski, the man, is based on his own recollections tape recorded a few years before his death, and on the author's extensive interviews with his family, colleagues, and students. Here we learn of his birth in a Jewish settlement in eastern Poland, high school in Russia, university in Rome, and maturity in the United States...We see his development as a mathematician in the context of the people around him.