Carl Jockusch
Carl Groos Jockusch, Jr. | |
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Carl Jockusch in 1974 | |
Born |
San Antonio, Texas | July 13, 1941
Thesis | Reducibilities in recursive function theory (1966) |
Doctoral advisor | Hartley Rogers, Jr. |
Doctoral students | Richard Blaylock, Paul Frederick Cohen, Kejia Ho, Tamara Hummel, Michael Ingrassia, Stuart Kurtz, Linda Lawton, Joseph Mileti, David Posner, Linda Richter, Benjamin Schaeffer, Lawrence Welch |
Spouse | Elizabeth A. Jockusch |
Carl Groos Jockusch, Jr. (born July 13, 1941 in San Antonio, Texas) is an American mathematician.[1] He graduated from Alamo Heights High School in 1959, attended Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, and transferred to Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania in 1960, where he received his B.A. in 1965 with Highest Honors. He then enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is a member of Phi-Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi.[2] In 2014, he became a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[3] He is a professor emeritus at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
In 1972 Jockusch and Robert I. Soare proved the Low Basis Theorem, an important result in mathematical logic with applications to recursion theory and reverse mathematics.
See also
References
- ↑ Who's Who in the Midwest, 1994-1995, 1994, p. 382
- ↑ Bibliographical note in his PhD thesis (Jockusch, 1966), p.104
- ↑ List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2014-12-17
- Jockusch Jr, C.G.; Soare, R.I. (1972), "Π01 Classes and Degrees of Theories", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society (American Mathematical Society) 173: 33–56, doi:10.2307/1996261, JSTOR 1996261
- Carl Groos Jockusch jr (Jun 1966). Reducibilities in recursive function theory (PDF) (Thesis). Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
External links
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