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Reuben Hersh

Reuben Hersh (December 9, 1927 – January 3, 2020) was an American mathematician and academic, best known for his writings on the nature, practice, and social impact of mathematics. Although he was generally known as Reuben Hersh, late in life he sometimes used the name Reuben Laznovsky in recognition of his father's ancestral family name. His work challenges and complements mainstream philosophy of mathematics.

Education[edit]

After receiving a B.A. in English literature from Harvard University in 1946, Hersh spent a decade writing for Scientific American and working as a machinist. After losing his right thumb when working with a band saw, he decided to study mathematics at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. In 1962, he was awarded a Ph.D. in mathematics from New York University; his advisor was P.D. Lax. He was affiliated with the University of New Mexico since 1964, where he was professor emeritus.

Academic career[edit]

Hersh wrote a number of technical articles on partial differential equations, probability, random evolutions (example), and linear operator equations. He was the co-author of four articles in Scientific American, and 12 articles in the Mathematical Intelligencer.


Hersh was best known as the co-author with Philip J. Davis of The Mathematical Experience (1981), which won a National Book Award in Science.[1][a] Hersh and Martin Davis won the 1984 Chauvenet Prize for their Scientific American[2] article on Hilbert's tenth problem.


Hersh advocated what he called a "humanist" philosophy of mathematics, opposed to both Platonism (so-called "realism") and its rivals nominalism/fictionalism/formalism. He held that mathematics is real, and its reality is social-cultural-historical, located in the shared thoughts of those who learn it, teach it, and create it. His article "The Kingdom of Math is Within You" (a chapter in his Experiencing Mathematics, 2014) explains how mathematicians' proofs compel agreement, even when they are inadequate as formal logic. He sympathized with the perspectives on mathematics of Imre Lakatos and Where Mathematics Comes From, George Lakoff and Rafael Nunez, Basic Books.

1981, Hersh and Philip Davis. . (Mariner Books, 1999).

The Mathematical Experience

1986, Hersh and Philip Davis. Descartes' Dream: The World According to Mathematics. (Dover, 2005)

1997. Oxford Univ. Press.

What Is Mathematics, Really?

2006, edited by Hersh. Springer Verlag.

18 Unconventional Essays on the Nature of Mathematics.

2009, Hersh and . Loving and Hating Mathematics. Princeton University Press

Vera John-Steiner

Greenwood, P.; Hersh, R. "Stochastic differentials and quasi-standard random variables", Probabilistic methods in differential equations (Proc. Conf., Univ. Victoria, Victoria, B. C., 1974), pp. 35–62. Lecture Notes in Math., Vol. 451, Springer, Berlin, 1975.

2014, Reuben Hersh. American Mathematical Society.

Experiencing Mathematics: What do we do, when we do mathematics?

2015, Reuben Hersh. . American Mathematical Society.

Peter Lax: Mathematician

Influence of non-standard analysis

Humanizing Mathematics and its Philosophy: Essays celebrating the 90th Birthday of Reuben Hersh

(Note: Google.com, somewhat unfortunately, decides to redirect this link weirdly, as of May 2018).

The Ideal Mathematician, with Phillip Davis

at the Univ. of New Mexico.

Web page

at googlesites.

Published Articles

AMS video interview with Reuben Hersh part 1