|
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||
| Fotografii | Monede | Timbre | Schite | Cautare |
Kreisel was sent to do War Service with the Admiralty immediately his university courses were over and he began work at West Leigh near Havant and close to the naval base at Portsmouth. The head of West Leigh at that time was Collingwood . After a while, Kreisel was moved to Fanum House in central London where he studied the effects of waves on the harbours which were being designed for the Normandy landings. In 1946 Kreisel returned to Cambridge to undertake research, studying mathematical logic. After the award of his doctorate Kreisel hoped for a Fellowship at Trinity but this was not forthcoming. He applied for academic positions and was appointed to Reading in 1949. Freeman Dyson was an undergraduate at Cambridge in the same year as Kreisel and by the 1950s was at the Institute for Advanced Study. He persuaded Gödel to invite Kreisel to the Institute for Advanced Study and Kreisel arrived there in the summer of 1955. Verena Huber-Dyson writes in :
Kreisel returned to Reading in 1957 but kept up a mathematically important correspondence with Gödel . In 1958-59 Kreisel was back in the United States, this time at Stanford. After returning to Reading for his last year on the staff there in 1959-60 he spent the two years 1960-62 in Paris. In 1962 Kreisel returned to the United States and was appointed to Stanford where he remained on the staff until he retired in 1985. S Feferman in writes about Kreisel's contributions:
One important aspect which Kreisel worked on over a period of 30 years was his "unwinding". In 1958 in a paper Mathematical significance of consistency proof in 1958 Kreisel wrote:
This "different general program" he later gave the more colourful name "unwinding program". As Feferman writes :
Kreisel was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1966. Source:School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews, Scotland |