Biography:Leo Corry

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Short description: Israeli historian of mathematics
Leo Corry
ליאו קורי
LC2022.jpg
Born1956
Santiago, Chile
NationalityIsraeli
Academic background
EducationTel Aviv University Ph.D. (1990)
ThesisThe origins of category theory as a mathematical discipline (1990)
Doctoral advisorSabetai Unguru
Academic work
DisciplineHistory
Sub-disciplineHistory of mathematics

Leo Corry (Hebrew: ליאו קורי, born 1956 in Santiago de Chile[1]) is an Israeli historian of mathematics.

Biography

Corry migrated with his Jewish family to Venezuela when he was two years old. He attended primary and secondary school at Colegio Moral y Luces of Caracas and then at the Universidad Simón Bolívar studied mathematics with licentiate's degree in 1977. He attended graduate school at the University of Tel Aviv. There he received in 1983 his master's degree in mathematics with master's thesis Splitting data in cohomology classes, supervised by Shmuel Rosset, and in 1990 his Ph.D. in the history of science with Ph.D. thesis The origins of category theory as a mathematical discipline, supervised by Sabetai Unguru and Shmuel Rosset.[2] At the University of Tel Aviv, Corry became in 1985 an instructor, in 1996 a lecturer, in 2004 an associate professor and from 2007 a full professor in the Cohn Institute for the History of Science. He was the Director of the Cohn Institute from 2003 to 2009, Director of the Yavetz School of Hisotircal Studies from 2013 to 2015, and Dean of Humanities at TAU between 2015 and 2020. In the academic year 1994–1995, he was fellow at the Dibner Institute for the History of Science and Technology at MIT, for the academic year 1995–1996 at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin and in 2006 at the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin.

Corry has done research on the development of modern algebra and number theory (including computational number theory done by Harry Vandiver, D. H. Lehmer, and Emma Lehmer) and the philosophy of mathematics (including the Bourbaki School). His research has also dealt with Albert Einstein, Hermann Minkowski, David Hilbert and his school, the history of Latin American science, and Jorge Luis Borges.[3] With John Stachel and Jürgen Renn, Corry discovered new documents concerning the priority dispute between Hilbert and Einstein, and these new documents support Einstein against Hilbert.[4][5]

In 2006, Corry was an invited speaker at the ICM in Madrid with a talk On the origin of Hilbert's sixth problem: physics and the empiricist approach to axiomatization.[6]

From 1999 to 2009 and from 2011 to 2013, he was editor of Science in Context.[citation needed]

Selected publications

References

  1. Portrait at Wissenschaftskolleg Berlin
  2. Leo Corry at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. Corry The Literary World of Jorge Luis Borges (Hebrew), Tel Aviv: Ministry of Defense Publications: The Broadcast University, 1997
  4. Corry, L.; Renn, J.; Stachel, J. (14 November 1997). "Belated Decision in the Hilbert-Einstein Priority Dispute". Science 278 (5341): 1270–1273. doi:10.1126/science.278.5341.1270. Bibcode1997Sci...278.1270C. 
  5. Broad, William J. (18 November 1997). "Findings Back Einstein In a Plagiarism Dispute". New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/1997/11/18/science/findings-back-einstein-in-a-plagiarism-dispute.html. 
  6. Corry, Leo (2006). "On the origins of Hilbert's sixth problem: physics and the empiricist approach to axiomatization". Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians (Madrid) 3: 1679–1718. 
  7. Drucker, Thomas. "Review: Modern algebra and the rise of mathematical structures by Leo Corry". Bulletin of Symbolic Journal 13 (1): 102–104. doi:10.1017/s1079898600002389. 

External links