Gian-Carlo Rota was born in Vigevano, Italy, in 1932. He died in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1999. He had several careers, most notably as a mathematician, but also as a philosopher and a consultant to the United States government. His mathematical career was equally varied. His early mathematical studies were at Princeton (1950 to 1953) and Yale (1953 to 1956). In 1956, he completed his doctoral thesis under the direction of Jacob T. Schwartz. This thesis was published as the paper "Extension theory of differential operators I", the first paper reprinted in this volume. Rota's early work was in analysis, more specifically, in operator theory, differential equations, ergodic theory, and probability theory. In the 1960's, Rota was motivated by problems in fluctuation theory to study some operator identities of Glen Baxter (see [7]). Together with other problems in probability theory, this led Rota to study combinatorics. His series of papers, "On the foundations of combinatorial theory", led to a fundamental re-evaluation of the subject. Later, in the 1990's, Rota returned to some of the problems in analysis and probability theory which motivated his work in combinatorics. This was his intention all along, and his early death robbed mathematics of his unique perspective on linkages between the discrete and the continuous. Glimpses of his new research programs can be found in [2,3,6,9,10].
Author(s): Jean Dhombres, Joseph P.S. Kung (editor), Norton Starr (editor)
Series: Contemporary Mathematicians
Publisher: Birkhäuser
Year: 2003
Language: English
Commentary: https://link.springer.com/book/9780817642754
Pages: 412
Tags: History of Mathematics; Analysis; Combinatorics; Probability Theory
Introduction and Reminiscences
Chapter 1. Differential Operators
Chapter 2. Theory of Linear Operators
Chapter 3. Reynolds Operators
Chapter 4. Ergodic Theory
Chapter 5. Inequalities
Chapter 6. Geometric Probability and Profinite Combinatorics
Chapter 7. Probability Theory.