Andreas Blass

Andreas R. Blass

Prof. Andreas Blass giving a talk during the conference "Boise Extravaganza in Set Theory BEST 17", Boise, Idaho, March 2008
Born October 27, 1947
Nuremberg
Residence Ann Arbor, Michigan
Nationality  United States
Fields Mathematician
Institutions University of Michigan
Doctoral advisor Frank Wattenberg
Known for set theory, mathematical logic, theoretical computer science.

Andreas Raphael Blass (born October 27, 1947 in Nuremberg) is a mathematician, currently a professor at the University of Michigan. He specializes in mathematical logic, particularly set theory, and theoretical computer science.

Blass graduated from the University of Detroit, where he was a Putnam Fellow, in 1966 with a B.S. in physics. He received his Ph.D. in 1970 from Harvard University, with a thesis on Orderings of Ultrafilters written under the supervision of Frank Wattenberg.[1] Since 1970 he has been employed by the University of Michigan, first as a T.H. Hildebrandt Research Instructor (197072), then assistant professor (197276), associate professor (197684) and since 1984 he has been a full professor there.

In 2014, he became a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[2]

Selected publications and results

In 1984 Blass proved that the existence of a basis for every vector space is equivalent to the Axiom of Choice. He made important contributions in the development of the set theory of the reals and forcing.

Blass was the first to point out connections between game semantics and linear logic.

He has authored about 175 research articles in mathematical logic and theoretical computer science, including:

References

  1. Andreas Blass at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society

External links

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