Paul Erdős
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Paul Erdős also Pál Erdős, in English Paul Erdos or Paul Erdös, (March 26, 1913 – September 20, 1996) was an immensely prolific (and famously eccentric) Hungarian mathematician who, with hundreds of collaborators, worked on problems in combinatorics, graph theory, number theory, classical analysis, approximation theory, set theory and probability theory.
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Biography
He was born in Budapest, Hungary as Erdős Pál. (Erdős is pronounced as IPA Template:IPA.) After his siblings died before his birth at the ages of 3 and 5, he was the only child of Anna and Lajos Erdős. His parents were both Jewish mathematicians, from a vibrant intellectual community.Template:Rf He could already add at age 3 and at age 4 he could calculate for friends of the family how many seconds they had lived. Erdős showed early promise as a child prodigy, and soon became regarded as a mathematical genius by his peers. He was entranced (or perhaps obsessed) with mathematics his whole life — his colleagues said he still put in 15 hours a day doing mathematics in his 80s. Template:Citation needed
In 1934, he was granted a doctorate title in mathematics. Because anti-semitism was increasing, he moved that same year to Manchester, England to be a guest lecturer. In 1938, he accepted his first American position as a scholarship holder at Princeton University. At this time, he began to develop the habit of traveling from campus to campus. He would not stay long in one place and traveled back and forth between mathematical institutions until his death.
Although he was famous and the recipient of many awards, worldly goods meant little to him; as a philanthropist, he donated most of the money he got from his awards or from other sources to people in need and various worthy causes. He spent most of his life as a "vagabond", travelling between scientific conferences and the homes of colleagues all over the world. He would typically show up at a colleague's doorstep and announce "my brain is open", staying long enough to collaborate on a few papers before moving on a few days later. In many cases, he would ask the current collaborator about whom he (Erdős) should visit next. His working style has been humorously compared to traversing a linked list.
As his colleague Alfréd Rényi said, "a mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into theorems", and Erdős drank copious quantities. After 1971 he also took amphetamines, despite the concern of his friends, who bet him $500 that he could not stop taking the drug for a month. Erdős won the bet, but complained that mathematics had been set back by a month: "Before, when I looked at a piece of blank paper my mind was filled with ideas. Now all I see is a blank piece of paper." The bet won, he promptly resumed his amphetamine habit.
He had his own idiosyncratic vocabulary: he spoke of "The Book," an imaginary book in which God had written down the best and most elegant proofs for mathematical theorems. Lecturing in 1985 he said, "You don't have to believe in God, but you should believe in The Book." He himself doubted the existence of God, whom he called the "Supreme Fascist" (SF), but accused the SF of hiding his socks, Hungarian passports, and the best equations. When he saw a particularly beautiful mathematical proof he would exclaim, "This one's from The Book!".
Other idiosyncratic elements of Erdős' vocabulary include: children were referred to as "epsilons"; women were "bosses"; men were "slaves"; people who stopped doing math had "died"; people who died had "left"; alcoholic drinks were "poison"; music was "noise"; and, to give a mathematical lecture was "to preach." Also, all countries which he thought failed to provide freedom to individuals as long as they did no harm to anyone else were classified as imperialist and given a name that began with a lowercase letter. For example, the U.S. was "samland" (after Uncle Sam), the Soviet Union was "joedom" (after Joseph Stalin), and Israel was referred to as "israel." For his epitaph he suggested the saying "Finally I am becoming stupider no more" (Hungarian: "Végre nem butulok tovább").
He died of a heart attack on September 20, 1996 while attending a conference in Warsaw, Poland. Since Erdős' "leaving", a book entitled "Proofs from the Book" has been published, intended as a collection of the most beautiful mathematical proofs in the spirit of Erdős.
Mathematical work
Erdős was one of the most prolific publishers of papers in mathematical history, second only to Leonhard Euler. He wrote around 1,500 mathematical articles in his lifetime, mostly with co-authors, all of them nontrivial. He had about 500 collaborators, and made mathematical collaboration a social activity in a way that changed the way many mathematicians worked.
Of his contributions, the development of Ramsey theory and the application of the probabilistic method especially stand out. Extremal combinatorics owes to him a whole approach, derived in part from the tradition of analytic number theory.
Collaborations
Among his frequent collaborators were Yousef Alavi, Béla Bollobás, Stefan Burr, Fan Chung, Ralph Faudree, Ron Graham, András Gyárfás, András Hajnal, Eric Milner, János Pach, Carl Pomerance, Richard Rado (one of the co-authors of the famous Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem), Alfréd Rényi, Vojtech Rődl, C. C. Rousseau, Andras Sárközy, Dick Schelp, Miklós Simonovits, Vera Sós, Joel Spencer, Endre Szemerédi, Paul Turán and Peter Winkler.
Erdős number
Because of his prolific output, friends created the Erdős number as a humorous tribute; Erdős alone was assigned the Erdős number of 0 (for being himself), while his immediate collaborators could claim an Erdős number of 1, their collaborators have Erdős number at most 2, and so on. Some have estimated that 90% of the world's active mathematicians have an Erdős number smaller than 10 (not surprising in the light of the small world phenomenon). It is jokingly said that Baseball Hall of Famer Hank Aaron has an Erdős number of 1 because they both autographed the same baseball when Emory University awarded them honorary degrees on the same day. Erdős numbers have also been humorously assigned to an infant, a horse and several actors. For details see the "Extended Erdős Number Project" [1]
DVD collection of his works
A collection on DVD of his writings has been compiled, but is not available yet, as the DVD's editors currently are negotiating to get the permissions from the journals in which his works were published.
Notes
Template:Ent The Budapest Jewish community of that day produced at least five remarkable thinkers besides Erdős: Eugene Wigner, the physicist and engineer; Edward Teller, the physicist; Leó Szilárd, the chemist and physicist; John von Neumann, the mathematician and polymath; and Georg Lukács, the philosopher.
References
- Aigner, M., Ziegler, G.M., Hofmann, K.H.; Proofs from THE BOOK (3/e). Springer, 2004. ISBN 3540404600.
- Hoffman, Paul; The man who loved only numbers. Hyperion, 1998. ISBN 0786863625.
- Schechter, Bruce; My brain is open. Touchstone, 2000. ISBN 0684859807 (biography).
See also
- Erdős conjectures
- Erdős–Borwein constant
- Erdős–Gyárfás conjecture
- Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem
- Erdős–Ginzburg–Ziv theorem
- Erdős–Szekeres theorem
- Erdős-Woods number
- Erdős cardinal
- Erdős number
- Prime number theorem
External links
- Template:MacTutor Biography
- Template:MathGenealogy
- N is a Number: a portrait of Paul Erdős
- Jerry Grossman at Oakland University. The Erdös Number Project
- The Man Who Loved Only Numbers - Royal Society Public Lecture by Paul Hoffman (RealVideo)
- His biography at Hungary.huTemplate:Link FA
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