- Kurt Gödel - Wikipedia
Kurt Friedrich Gödel ( ˈɡɜːrdəl GUR-dəl; [2] German: [ˈkʊʁt ˈɡøːdl̩] ⓘ; April 28, 1906 – January 14, 1978) was a logician, mathematician, and philosopher
- Kurt Gödel | Austrian Logician, Mathematician Philosopher | Britannica
Kurt Gödel (born April 28, 1906, Brünn, Austria-Hungary [now Brno, Czech Rep ]—died Jan 14, 1978, Princeton, N J , U S ) was an Austrian-born mathematician, logician, and philosopher who obtained what may be the most important mathematical result of the 20th century: his famous incompleteness theorem, which states that within any axiomatic math
- Mathematician KURT GODEL - TIME
Godel’s astonishing and disorienting discovery, published in 1931, proved that nearly a century of effort by the world’s greatest mathematicians was doomed to failure To appreciate Godel’s
- Kurt Gödel - Mathematician Biography, Contributions and Facts
After Gottlob Frege and Aristotle, he was one of the foremost logicians in the history He influenced twentieth century scientific and philosophical school of thoughts In 1931, he published his incompleteness theorems He developed a technique which is now called Gödel numbering
- Kurt Gödel (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Kurt Friedrich Gödel (b 1906, d 1978) was one of the principal founders of the modern, metamathematical era in mathematical logic
- Kurt Gödel - The Logician Who Shook Mathematics
Explore the life and work of Kurt Gödel, the mathematical genius behind the incompleteness theorems
- Kurt Gödel: The Genius of Metamathematics | SpringerLink
Early in his career, for his doctoral thesis and then for his Habilitation (Dr Sci ), he wrote earthshaking articles on the completeness and provability of mathematical-logical systems, upsetting the hypotheses of the most famous mathematicians philosophers of the time
- Hurt Gödel: The Eccentric Genius
At the University of Vienna, Gödel first studied number theory, but soon turned his attention to mathematical logic, which was to consume him for most of the rest of his life
|