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American logician (1943–2011) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James Earl Baumgartner (March 23, 1943 – December 28, 2011) was an American mathematician who worked in set theory, mathematical logic and foundations, and topology.[1]
James Earl Baumgartner | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | December 28, 2011 68) | (aged
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | University of California, Berkeley |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | Dartmouth College |
Doctoral advisor | Robert Lawson Vaught |
Doctoral students | Jean Larson Alan D. Taylor Stanley Wagon |
Baumgartner was born in Wichita, Kansas, began his undergraduate study at the California Institute of Technology in 1960, then transferred to the University of California, Berkeley, from which he received his PhD in 1970 from for a dissertation titled Results and Independence Proofs in Combinatorial Set Theory. His advisor was Robert Vaught.[2] He became a professor at Dartmouth College in 1969, and spent his entire career there.
One of Baumgartner's results is the consistency of the statement that any two -dense sets of reals are order isomorphic (a set of reals is -dense if it has exactly points in every open interval). With András Hajnal he proved the Baumgartner–Hajnal theorem, which states that the partition relation holds for and . He died in 2011 of a heart attack at his home in Hanover, New Hampshire.[1][3]
The mathematical context in which Baumgartner worked spans Suslin's problem, Ramsey theory, uncountable order types, disjoint refinements, almost disjoint families, cardinal arithmetics, filters, ideals, and partition relations, iterated forcing and Axiom A, proper forcing and the proper forcing axiom, chromatic number of graphs, a thin very-tall superatomic Boolean algebra, closed unbounded sets, and partition relations.[4]
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