Alfred Tarski: Early Work in Poland—Geometry and Teaching

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Andrew McFarland, Joanna McFarland, James Smith
Springer New York, 11 d’ag. 2014 - 499 pàgines

Alfred Tarski (1901–1983) was a renowned Polish/American mathematician, a giant of the twentieth century, who helped establish the foundations of geometry, set theory, model theory, algebraic logic and universal algebra. Throughout his career, he taught mathematics and logic at universities and sometimes in secondary schools. Many of his writings before 1939 were in Polish and remained inaccessible to most mathematicians and historians until now.

This self-contained book focuses on Tarski’s early contributions to geometry and mathematics education, including the famous Banach–Tarski paradoxical decomposition of a sphere as well as high-school mathematical topics and pedagogy. These themes are significant since Tarski’s later research on geometry and its foundations stemmed in part from his early employment as a high-school mathematics teacher and teacher-trainer. The book contains careful translations and much newly uncovered social background of these works written during Tarski’s years in Poland.

Alfred Tarski: Early Work in Poland serves the mathematical, educational, philosophical and historical communities by publishing Tarski’s early writings in a broadly accessible form, providing background from archival work in Poland and updating Tarski’s bibliography.

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Sobre l'autor (2014)

Andrew S. McFarland is Professor of Political Science and a Fellow of The Institute for the Humanities at the University of Illinois at Chicago. His main research interest is theorizing and empirically exploring the involvement of interest groups and social movements in politics. He has published several books in this field including "Common Cause: Lobbying in the Public Interest" (1984), "Neopluralism: The Evolution of Political Process Theory" (2004), and the co-edited "Social Movements and American Political Institutions" (1998). James K. A. Smith (PhD, Villanova University) is professor of philosophy at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he also holds the Gary and Henrietta Byker Chair in Applied Reformed Theology and Worldview. He is the editor of "Comment "magazine. Smith has authored or edited many books, including" Imagining the Kingdom" and the "Christianity Today" Book Award winners "Who's Afraid of Postmodernism?" and "Desiring the Kingdom". He is also editor of the well-received The Church and Postmodern Culture series (www.churchandpomo.org).

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