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The Map of My Life | 
enlarge | Author: Goro Shimura Publisher: Springer Category: Book
List Price: $34.95 Buy New: $27.93 You Save: $7.02 (20%)
New (21) Used (5) from $24.99
Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 690358
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 212 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.1 x 0.6
ISBN: 0387797149 Dewey Decimal Number: 512 EAN: 9780387797144 ASIN: 0387797149
Publication Date: September 5, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW
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Product Description
In this book, the author writes freely and often humorously about his life, beginning with his earliest childhood days. He describes his survival of American bombing raids when he was a teenager in Japan, his emergence as a researcher in a post-war university system that was seriously deficient, and his life as a mature mathematician in Princeton and in the international academic community. Every page of this memoir contains personal observations and striking stories. Such luminaries as Chevalley, Oppenheimer, Siegel, and Weil figure prominently in its anecdotes. Goro Shimura is Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at Princeton University. In 1996, he received the Leroy P. Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement from the American Mathematical Society. He is the author of Elementary Dirichlet Series and Modular Forms (Springer 2007), Arithmeticity in the Theory of Automorphic Forms (AMS 2000), and Introduction to the Arithmetic Theory of Automorphic Functions (Princeton University Press 1971).
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| Customer Reviews:
A Fascinating Biography and a Story about Mathematics October 1, 2008 A. D. Aczel 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Professor Goro Shimura has written an entertaining and illuminating autobiography, which serves also as a story of the development of mathematics in our time. This is a major book that tells the very interesting tale of Shimura's life, starting with his ancestors, seventeenth-century samurai retainers of a feudal lord in the area of Tokyo, where his family has lived ever since. It continues through childhood in Japan, travels throughout the world, a stay in Paris, and his taking his professorial position at Princeton University. Shimura is one of the greatest mathematicians of our time and a key developer of the ideas that led to the proof of Fermat's Last Theorem. The Shimura-Taniyama Conjecture was the overarching result proved by Andrew Wiles in the 1990s, which led to Fermat's Last Theorem as a corollary. Throughout this entertaining book, Shimura reveals many interesting details about other famous mathematicians of his time: Andre Weil, Carl Ludwig Siegel, and Claude Chevalley. There are original letters reprinted here, and other material that helps paint a complete picture of mathematics and its development in the twentieth century. Highly recommended!
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