Felix Hausdorff

Felix Hausdorff (November 8 1868 - January 26 1942) was a German mathematician who is considered to be one of the founders of modern topology and who contributed significantly to set theory and functional analysis. He defined and studied partially ordered sets, Hausdorff spaces, and the Hausdorff dimension. He proved the Hausdorff maximality theorem. He published philosophical and literary works under the pseudonym "Paul Mongr". Hausdorff studied in Leipzig and taught mathematics there until 1910, when he became professor of mathematics in Bonn. When the Nazis came to power, Hausdorff, who was Jewish, felt that as a respected university professor he would be spared from persecution. However, his abstract mathematics was denounced as "Jewish", useless, and "un-German" and he lost his position in 1935. When in 1942 he could no longer avoid being sent to a concentration camp, Hausdorff committed suicide together with his wife and sister-in-law. Hausdorff, Felix Hausdorff, Felix Hausdorff, Felix Hausdorff, Felix

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
melbourne grand prix circuit
monaco grand prix
fission
fusion
four color theorem
fahrenheit 451
franks
francis xavier
fossil
family educational rights and privacy act
forgetting
free radical
fay wray
forgetting curve
field programmable gate array
forgetting rate
free running sleep
fenrisulfr
fuel
final fantasy
fatty acid
fearless
franklin delano roosevelt
four freedoms
first order predicate calculus
functor
fimbulwinter
february 10
frankfurt
albert, king of saxony
formal grammar
franois d'aguilon
freenet
fortified wine
fred hoyle
french cuisine
five spice powder
fundamental group
franklin pierce
february 19
february 24
february 23
february 22
february 21