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Saharon Shelah

Israeli mathematician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saharon Shelah
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Saharon Shelah (Hebrew: שַׂהֲרֹן שֶׁלַח; Śahăron Šelaḥ, Hebrew pronunciation: [sähäʁo̞n ʃe̞läχ]; born July 3, 1945) is an Israeli mathematician. He is a professor of mathematics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Rutgers University in New Jersey.

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Biography

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Shelah was born in Jerusalem on July 3, 1945. He is the son of the Hebrew poet and Canaanist political activist Yonatan Ratosh.[2] He received his PhD for his work on stable theories in 1969 from the Hebrew University.[1]

Shelah is married to Yael,[2] and has three children.[3] His brother, magistrate judge Hamman Shelah was murdered along with his wife and daughter by an Egyptian soldier in the Ras Burqa massacre in 1985.

Shelah planned to be a scientist while at primary school, but initially was attracted to physics and biology, not mathematics.[4] Later he found mathematical beauty in studying geometry: He said, "But when I reached the ninth grade I began studying geometry and my eyes opened to that beauty—a system of demonstration and theorems based on a very small number of axioms which impressed me and captivated me." At the age of 15, he decided to become a mathematician, a choice cemented after reading Abraham Halevy Fraenkel's book An Introduction to Mathematics.[4]

He received a B.Sc. from Tel Aviv University in 1964, served in the Israel Defense Forces Army between 1964 and 1967, and obtained a M.Sc. from the Hebrew University (under the direction of Haim Gaifman) in 1967.[5] He then worked as a teaching assistant at the Institute of Mathematics of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem while completing a Ph.D. there under the supervision of Michael Oser Rabin,[5] on a study of stable theories.

Shelah was a lecturer at Princeton University during 1969–70, and then worked as an assistant professor at the University of California, Los Angeles during 1970–71.[5] He became a professor at Hebrew University in 1974, a position he continues to hold.[5]

He has been a visiting professor at the following universities:[5] the University of Wisconsin (1977–78), the University of California, Berkeley (1978 and 1982), the University of Michigan (1984–85), at Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia (1985), and Rutgers University, New Jersey (1985). He has been a distinguished visiting professor at Rutgers University since 1986.[5]

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Academic career

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Shelah's main interests lie in mathematical logic, model theory in particular, and in axiomatic set theory.[6] He is a prolific author, with more than 1100 peer-reviewed research papers since his first in 1969.[7]

In model theory, he developed classification theory, which led him to a solution of Morley's problem.[8] In set theory, he discovered the notion of proper forcing, an important tool in iterated forcing arguments. With PCF theory, he showed that in spite of the undecidability of the most basic questions of cardinal arithmetic (such as the continuum hypothesis), there are still highly nontrivial ZFC theorems about cardinal exponentiation. Shelah constructed a Jónsson group,[9] an uncountable group for which every proper subgroup is countable. He showed that Whitehead's problem[10] is independent of ZFC. He gave the first primitive recursive upper bound to van der Waerden's numbers V(C,N).[11] He extended Arrow's impossibility theorem on voting systems.[12]

Maryanthe Malliaris and Shelah[13] studied Keisler's order, a construction from model theory, and in the process proved equality between two cardinal characteristics of the continuum, 𝖕 and 𝖙, resolving a problem that had been open for fifty years. This work earned them the 2017 Hausdorff Medal of the European Set Theory Society.

Shelah's work has had a deep impact on model theory and set theory. The tools he developed for his classification theory have been applied to a wide number of topics and problems in model theory and have led to great advances in stability theory and its uses in algebra and algebraic geometry as shown for example by Ehud Hrushovski and many others. Classification theory involves deep work developed in many dozens of papers to completely solve the spectrum problem on classification of first order theories in terms of structure and number of nonisomorphic models, a huge tour de force. Following that he has extended the work far beyond first order theories, for example for abstract elementary classes. This work also has had important applications to algebra by works of Boris Zilber.[14]

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Awards

Selected works

  • Proper forcing, Springer 1982 ISBN 978-0-387-11593-1
  • Proper and improper forcing (2nd edition of Proper forcing), Springer 1998 ISBN 978-1107168367
  • Around classification theory of models, Springer 1986 ISBN 978-3540164487
  • Classification theory and the number of non-isomorphic models, Studies in Logic and the Foundations of Mathematics, 1978,[27] 2nd edition 1990, Elsevier ISBN 978-0-444-70260-9
  • Classification Theory for Abstract Elementary Classes, College Publications 2009 ISBN 9781904987710
  • Classification Theory for Abstract Elementary Classes, Volume 2, College Publications 2009 ISBN 978-1-904987-72-7
  • Cardinal Arithmetic, Oxford University Press 1994 ISBN 0-19-853785-9[28]
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See also

References

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