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Research collective From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Warsaw School of Mathematics is the name given to a group of mathematicians who worked at Warsaw, Poland, in the two decades between the World Wars, especially in the fields of logic, set theory, point-set topology and real analysis. They published in the journal Fundamenta Mathematicae[1]]], founded in 1920—one of the world's first specialist pure-mathematics journals. It was in this journal, in 1933, that Alfred Tarski—whose illustrious career would a few years later take him to the University of California, Berkeley—published his celebrated theorem on the undefinability of the notion of truth.
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (August 2012) |
Notable members of the Warsaw School of Mathematics have included:
Additionally, notable logicians of the Lwów–Warsaw School of Logic, working at Warsaw, have included:
Fourier analysis has been advanced at Warsaw by:
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