Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Stephen Cole Kleene (/ ˈ k l eɪ n i / KLAY-nee; January 5, 1909 – January 25, 1994) was an American mathematician. One of the students of Alonzo Church , Kleene, along with Rózsa Péter , Alan Turing , Emil Post , and others, is best known as a founder of the branch of mathematical logic known as recursion theory , which ...

  2. Stephen Cole Kleene (born Jan. 5, 1909, Hartford, Conn., U.S.—died Jan. 25, 1994, Madison, Wis.) was an American mathematician and logician whose work on recursion theory helped lay the foundations of theoretical computer science.

  3. Jan 25, 1994 · Stephen C Kleene was an American mathematician and logician best known his work on recursion theory. View four larger pictures. Biography. Stephen C Kleene's father was Gustav Adolph Kleene, a professor of economics at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut at the time of his son's birth. He remained there for the rest of his career.

  4. STEPHEN COLE KLEENE January 5, 1909–January 25, 1994 BY SAUNDERS MAC LANE S TEVE KLEENE, A YANKEE from Maine, became a pioneer mathematical logician. His clear, precise ideas developed the modern study of computable functions and of automata. He was also a devoted mountaineer. Kleene was born in 1909 in Hartford, Connecticut, but

  5. Feb 12, 2016 · Topics. logic, mathematical logic, symbolic logic, foundations of logic. Collection. opensource. Language. English. Scanned by YRB in 2004-2005. I improved the scan in 2014 using GNU/Linux program `unpaper'. To find the original file (YRB's scan), check "All Files".

  6. Stephen Cole Kleene (pronounced “KLAY-nee” by Steve himself) was born on January 5, 1909 in Hartford, Connecticut. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Amherst College in 1930, and a Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1934 under the tutelage of Alonzo Church.

  7. Mar 13, 2009 · This 1952 book by Stephen Cole Kleene (1909-1994) is essential for anyone who wants to understand mathematical logic at the graduate level. The motivating theme driving this book is the consistency question for arithmetic.

    • Stephen Cole Kleene