Biography:Nathan Altshiller Court

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Short description: Polish-American mathematician
Nathan Altshiller Court

Nathan Altshiller Court (January 22, 1881 – July 20, 1968) was a Polish–American mathematician. He was a geometer and the author of the popular book College Geometry,[1] who spent most of his career at the University of Oklahoma.

Biography

Nathan A. Court was born Natan Altszyller[2] on 22 January 1881, in Warsaw, Russian Poland, the eldest of nine children.[3] He attended primary and secondary school in Warsaw, but due to anti-Jewish discrimination could not attend university there.[4] In 1907 he moved to Belgium where he attended the University of Liège and the University of Ghent, receiving his D.Sc. in 1911.[4][3]

Immediately afterward he moved to New York City , anglicizing his name to Nathan Altshiller.[4][5] Though he could not read or write in English when he arrived, within weeks he began lecturing in advanced mathematics at Columbia University,[4] and at the beginning of the next semester he was hired as a mathematics instructor teaching evening classes while doing his graduate work in Mathematics and Astronomy during the day.[6] In 1912 he married Sophie Ravitch, whom he had known in Warsaw.[4] He left New York in 1913, teaching for two years at the University of Washington in Seattle where his son Arnold was born in 1914, and for two years at the University of Colorado.[4]

In 1916 he moved to the University of Oklahoma, where he remained for the rest of his career.[4][7] In 1919, he became a U.S. citizen and changed his last name to Court, keeping Altshiller as a middle name.[8][5] The first edition of his best known book, College Geometry, a university-level textbook in synthetic geometry, was published in 1925.[9] In 1935 he published the solid geometry textbook Modern Pure Solid Geometry[10] and became a full professor at the University of Oklahoma. He continued teaching there until his retirement in 1951. College Geometry was continually in print without revision for over 25 years, but a revised edition was published in 1952.[5] A collection of his essays, Mathematics in Fun and in Earnest, was published in 1958.[11]

Court died of heart attack in Norman, Oklahoma on 20 July 1968.[6]

In his recognition, the Nathan A. Court Award was established by the OU Department of Mathematics, given to an outstanding freshman or sophomore math major.[12]

Works

Court wrote over 100 scholarly papers.[3][13] He was a frequent contributor to The American Mathematical Monthly's problem section.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Eves, Howard (2001), "Nathan Altshiller Court", Mathematical Reminiscences, Mathematical Association of America, pp. 153–54, ISBN 978-0-88385-535-5 
  2. Situation de l'Enseignement Supérieur Donné aux Frais de l'État. Rapport Triennal a Années, p. 1911, p. CCXXX

    Slavische studenten aan de R.U.G. (1855-1914), p.58

  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Goodman, George J. (1968), "Nathan Altshiller Court, 1881–1968", Proceedings of the Oklahoma Academy of Science 49: 224, https://ojs.library.okstate.edu/osu/index.php/OAS/article/view/4698 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 Wiley, Billie Rhue (1935), "Nathan Altshiller Court", Sooner Magazine 8 (3): p. 63, https://journals.shareok.org/soonermagazine/article/view/4225 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "Nathan Altshiller Court, Professor of Mathematics, Author of Textbooks", The Detroit Jewish News: p. 47, 1968-08-02, https://news.arcasearchdev.com/usmidjncn/PDFs/djn-1968-08-02-0-047.pdf 
  6. 6.0 6.1 David W. Levy, "Nathan Altshiller Court and Mathematics at the University of Oklahoma", Address to OU Math PhD Alumni Reunion, 1993
  7. "New Teachers Selected", The Copan Leader: p. 4, 1916-09-08, "State University, Norman: [...] Nathan Altshiller, instructor in mathematics" 
  8. "Professor Changes Name in Becoming a Citizen", Daily Ardmoreite: p. 11, 1919-03-27, "Norman, Okla. March 26.—Final citizenship papers were approved by District Judge Fletcher Swank here yesterday for Nathan Altshiller, assistant professor of mathematics in the University of Oklahoma. In becoming a citizen Altshiller changed his name to Nathan Altshiller Court. He was born in Russian Poland." 
  9. Reviews:
    Owens, Helen B. (1927), "College Geometry by Nathan Altshiller-Court", The American Mathematical Monthly 34 (6): 326–328 
    Bakst, Aaron (1953), "College Geometry, An Introduction to the Modern Geometry of the Triangle and the Circle, (second ed.) by Nathan Altshiller-Court", The Mathematics Teacher 46 (8): 607–608 

    Marchisotto, Anne (2008), "College Geometry: An Introduction to the Modern Geometry of the Triangle and the Circle, by Nathan Altshiller-Court", MAA Reviews, https://www.maa.org/press/maa-reviews/college-geometry-an-introduction-to-the-modern-geometry-of-the-triangle-and-the-circle 

  10. Reviews:
    Nichols, Irby C. (1936), "Modern Pure Solid Geometry by Nathan Altshiller-Court", National Mathematics Magazine 10 (4): 153–154 
    Lob, H. (1936), "Modern Pure Solid Geometry by N. Altshiller-Court", The Mathematical Gazette 20 (238): 160–161 

    Musselman, J. R. (1936), "Modern Pure Solid Geometry by N. Altshiller-Court", The American Mathematical Monthly 43 (4): 231–232 

  11. Reviews:
    Kempner, Aubrey J. (1959), "Mathematics in Fun and in Earnest by Nathan Altshiller Court", The American Mathematical Monthly 66 (9): 826–827 
    Blyth, Isobel (1959), "Mathematics in Fun and in Earnest by Nathan Altshiller Court", The Mathematics Teacher 52 (4): 301–302 

    Dudley, Underwood (2006), "Mathematics in Fun and in Earnest by Nathan A. Court", MAA Reviews, https://www.maa.org/press/maa-reviews/mathematics-in-fun-and-in-earnest 

  12. Nathan A. Court Award
  13. Kimberling, Clark (2003), Nathan Altshiller Court (1881-1968): geometer, http://faculty.evansville.edu/ck6/bstud/court.html , a comprehensive list of Court's publications