Front cover image for Alfred Tarski : life and logic

Alfred Tarski : life and logic

Alfred Tarski, one of the greatest logicians of all time, is widely thought of as "the man who defined truth." His mathematical work on the concepts of truth and logical consequence are cornerstones of modern logic, influencing developments in philosophy, linguistics and computer science. Tarski was a charismatic teacher and zealous promoter of his view of logic as the foundation of all rational thought, as well as a bon-vivant and a womanizer, who played the "great man" to the hilt. Born in Warsaw in 1901 to Jewish parents, he changed his name and converted to Catholicism, but was never able to obtain a professorship in his home country. A fortuitous trip to the United States at the outbreak of World War 1 saved his life and turned his career around, even though it separated him from his family for years. By the war's end, Tarski was established as a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley, where he started a department in logic and methodology that attracted students and distinguished researchers from all over the world. From the cafes of Warsaw and Vienna to the mountains and deserts of California, this first full- length biography places Tarski in the social, intellectual and historical context of his times. It presents a vivid picture of a personally and professionally passionate man, interlaced with an account of his major scientific achievements
Print Book, English, 2004
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2004
Biography
vi, 425 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780521802406, 0521802407
54691904
The two Tarskis
Independence and university
Interlude I: The Banach-Tarski paradox, set theory and the axiom of choice
Polot! The Polish attribute
Interlude II: The completeness and decidability of algebra and geometry
A wider sphere of influence
Interlude III: Truth and definability
How the 'unity of science' saved Tarski's Life
Berkeley is so far from Princeton
Building a school
Interlude IV: The Publication Campaigns
'Papa Tarski' and his students
Three meetings and two departures
Logic and methodology, center stage
Heydays
Interlude V: Model theory and the 1963 Symposium
Around the world
Los Angeles and Berkeley
Interlude VI: Algebras of logic
A decade of honors
The last times