Phillip Griffiths
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Phillip Griffiths (born 1938) is an American mathematician, known for his work in the field of geometry, and in particular for the complex manifold approach to algebraic geometry. He was a major developer in particular of the theory of variation of Hodge structure in Hodge theory and moduli theory.
He received his Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1962 working under Donald Spencer and since then has held positions at Berkeley (1962-1967), Princeton (1967-1972), Harvard University (1972-1983), Duke University (1983-1991), and the Institute for Advanced Study (1991 to the present), where he was Director until 2003. He has published on algebraic geometry, differential geometry, geometric function theory, and the geometry of partial differential equations.
In 2008 he was awarded the Wolf Prize (jointly with Deligne and Mumford).
He is co-author, with Joe Harris, of Principles of Algebraic Geometry, a well-regarded texbook on complex algebraic geometry.
[edit] References
- Phillip Griffiths at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- Phillip Griffiths' page on the website of the International Mathematics Union