Philip M. Whitman

Philip Martin Whitman
Nationality United States
Fields Lattice theory
Institutions UPenn,[1] Tufts[2]
Education Haverford College
Alma mater Harvard University
Thesis Free Lattices (1941)
Doctoral advisor Garrett Birkhoff
Known for Free lattice word problem
Notable awards AMS Honorary Member

Philip Martin Whitman is an American mathematician who contributed to lattice theory, in particular to the theory of free lattices.

Living in Pittsburgh,[3] he attended the Haverford College, where he earned a corporation scholarship for 1936–37,[4] and a Clementine Cope fellowship for 1937–38,[5] and was awarded highest honors in mathematical astronomy in 1937.[6] He was elected to the college's chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Society.[7] In June 1937, he was conferred the Bachelor of science degree from Haverford.[8] According to Garrett Birkhoff, Whitman was an undergraduate Harvard student in 1937,[9] and an outstanding graduate student not later than 1940, one of the first who taught elementary courses to freshmen in the mathematics department.[10] In 1938 he earned his AM,[11] and in June 1941 he obtained his Ph.D. degree from Harvard University.[12] He was a member of the AMS not later than 1947,[13] and was awarded an AMS honorary membership not later than 1995.[14]

Selected publications

References

  1. Whitman (1946), p. 522
  2. Birkhoff, Whitman (1949), p. 136
  3. Haverford Bulletin p. 12 (= vol.35, p. (6))
  4. Haverford Bulletin p. 125 (= vol 35., p. 99)
  5. Haverford Bulletin p. 429 (= vol.36, p. 101)
  6. Haverford Bulletin p. 433
  7. Haverford Bulletin, p. 128, 432
  8. Haverford Bulletin p. 428 (= vol.36, p. 100)
  9. Birkhoff (1988), p. 50
  10. Birkhoff (1988), p. 24
  11. Record at Harvard library
  12. Haverford News, Vol.33, No.5, Tue 28 Oct 1941, p. 8 (7)
  13. Bulletin of the AMS, Jul 1947, p. 715
  14. Notices of the AMS Vol.42, No.12, Dec.1995, p. 1555

External links

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