Gerald Sacks
Gerald Enoch Sacks (born 1933, Brooklyn) is a logician who holds a joint appointment at Harvard University as a professor of mathematical logic and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a professor emeritus.[1][2] His most important contributions have been in recursion theory. Named after him is Sacks forcing, a forcing notion based on perfect sets[3] and the Sacks Density Theorem, which asserts that the partial order of the recursively enumerable Turing degrees is dense.[4]
Sacks earned his Ph.D. in 1961 from Cornell University under the direction of J. Barkley Rosser, with a dissertation entitled On Suborderings of Degrees of Recursive Insolvability. Among his notable students are Lenore Blum, Harvey Friedman, Sy Friedman, Leo Harrington, Richard Shore, Steve Simpson and Theodore Slaman.[5]
Selected publications
- Degrees of unsolvability, Princeton University Press 1963, 1966[6]
- Saturated Model Theory, Benjamin 1972; 2nd edition, World Scientific 2010[7]
- Higher Recursion theory, Springer 1990[8]
- Selected Logic Papers, World Scientific 1999[9]
- Mathematical Logic in the 20th Century, World Scientific 2003
References
- ↑ Short CV, retrieved 2015-06-26.
- ↑ "Professor Gerald Sacks Retires from MIT" (PDF), Integral: News from the Mathematics Department at MIT, 1: 6, Autumn 2006.
- ↑ Halbeisen, Lorenz J. (2011), Combinatorial Set Theory: With a Gentle Introduction to Forcing, Springer Monographs in Mathematics, Springer, pp. 380–381, ISBN 9781447121732.
- ↑ Soare, Robert I. (1987), Recursively Enumerable Sets and Degrees: A Study of Computable Functions and Computably Generated Sets, Perspectives in Mathematical Logic, Springer, p. 245, ISBN 9783540152996.
- ↑ Gerald Sacks at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ Review of Degrees of unsolvability by Kenneth Appel, MR0186554
- ↑ Review of Saturated model theory by P. Stepanek, MR0398817
- ↑ Review of Higher recursion theory by Dag Normann, MR1080970
- ↑ Review of Selected logic papers by Dag Normann, MR1783306