- E. H. Moore
Infobox Scientist
name = E.H. Moore
box_width = 300px
image_width = 300px
caption = Eliakim Hastings Moore
birth_date =January 26 ,1862
birth_place =Marietta, Ohio ,U.S.
death_date =December 30 ,1932
death_place =Chicago ,Illinois , U.S.
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citizenship =
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field =Mathematics
work_institutions =University of Chicago 1892-31Yale University 1887-89Northwestern University 1886-87, 1889-92
alma_mater =Yale University
doctoral_advisor =Hubert Anson Newton
doctoral_students =George Birkhoff Leonard Dickson Robert Lee Moore Oswald Veblen
known_for =Axiomatic system s
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footnotes =Eliakim Hastings Moore (
January 26 ,1862 , Marietta,Ohio –December 30 ,1932 ,Chicago ,Illinois ) was an Americanmathematician .Life
Moore, the son of a Methodist minister, discovered mathematics through a summer job at the Cincinnati Observatory while in high school. He learned mathematics at
Yale University , where he was a member ofSkull & Bones and obtained a B.A. in 1883 and the Ph.D. in 1885 with a thesis, supervised byHubert Anson Newton , on some work ofWilliam Kingdon Clifford andArthur Cayley . Newton encouraged Moore to study in Germany, and thus he spent an academic year at theUniversity of Berlin , attending lectures byKronecker andWeierstrass .On his return to the United States, Moore taught at Yale and at
Northwestern University . When theUniversity of Chicago opened its doors in 1892, Moore was the first head of its mathematics department, a position he retained until his death in 1931. His first two colleagues wereBolza and Maschke. The resulting department was arguably the first fully research-oriented mathematics department in American history. Before then, an American had to go to Europe to learn how to do mathematical research.Accomplishments
Moore first worked in
abstract algebra , proving in 1893 that everyfinite field is aGalois field . Around 1900, he began working on the foundations ofgeometry . He reformulatedHilbert's axioms for geometry so that points were the onlyprimitive notion , thus turningHilbert 's primitive lines and planes into defined notions. In 1902, he further showed that one of Hilbert's axioms for geometry was redundant. Independentlycite web
last = Wilder
first = R.L.
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = Robert Lee Moore 1882-1974
work = Bull. AMS 82, 417-427
publisher =American Mathematical Society
date = 1976
url = http://www.discovery.utexas.edu/rlm/reference/wilder2.html
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doi =
accessdate = 08:49, 10 July 2007 ] , the twenty year oldR.L. Moore (no relation) also proved this, but in a more elegant fashion than E. H. Moore used. When E. H. Moore heard of the feat, he arranged for a scholarship that would allow R.L. Moore to study for a doctorate at Chicago. E.H. Moore's work on axiom systems is considered one of the starting points formetamathematics andmodel theory . After 1906, he turned to the foundations of analysis. He also wrote onalgebraic geometry ,number theory , andintegral equations .At Chicago, Moore supervised 31 doctoral dissertations, including those of
George Birkhoff ,Leonard Dickson ,Robert Lee Moore (no relation), andOswald Veblen . Birkhoff and Veblen went on to forge and lead the first-rate departments at Harvard and Princeton, respectively. Dickson became the first great American algebraist and number theorist. Robert Moore founded American topology. According to theMathematics Genealogy Project , E. H. Moore has around 10,000 known "descendants," about as many asWeierstrass , who was 50 years older.Moore convinced the
New York Mathematical Society to change its name to theAmerican Mathematical Society , whose Chicago branch he led. He presided over the AMS, 1901-02, and edited the "Transactions of the American Mathematical Society", 1899-1907. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences, theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences , and theAmerican Philosophical Society .Notes
References
*
Ivor Grattan-Guinness , 2000. "The Search for Mathematical Roots 1870-1940". Princeton Uni. Press.
* Parshall, K. H., and Rowe, D. E., 1994. "The emergence of the American mathematical research community, 1876-1900 : J J Sylvester, Felix Klein, and E H Moore". Providence RI: AMS.ee also
*
Moore-Smith sequence
*Moore-Penrose inverse External links
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* Page on E. H. Moore in the [http://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/html/id.phtml?id=806 Mathematical Genealogy Project.]
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