Jan Lukasiewicz (1878 - 1956)
Jan Lukasiewicz (pronounced Wu-cash-ay-vich) was born on December 21st,
1878 in the city of Lwow in Poland. He was one of several notable mathematicians
specializing in logic during the first part of the twentieth century.
At the time of his birth, Poland was under Austrian rule, although Lwow later
became part of the Soviet Union. His father was a captain in the Austrian army
but at home they spoke Polish and were practising Roman Catholics. As a young
man, Lukasiewicz studied mathematics and philosophy at the local University and
was awarded a doctorate in 1902. He continued at the University of Lwow until
1915 when he accepted a lectureship at the University of Warsaw, which was under
German occupation at the time. Between the wars he was the Polish Minister of
Education and Dean of the School of Philosophy, also filling the post of Rector
of the University for two terms. While at Warsaw he published some eighty
articles and papers on psychology, mathematics and philosophy.
Like many in Poland, Lukasiewicz and his wife Regina suffered greatly during the
Second World War. His house was burned, with the loss of his library and
manuscripts, and he found it impossible to continue working. He started to give
lectures at the underground university and also helped govern the city under
German occupation. Friends in Switzerland and Germany helped him escape from
Poland shortly before the abortive uprising of 1944. He was in hiding in
Munster, Germany, when it was liberated by US troops in April, 1945. He then
moved, via Belgium, to Dublin where he accepted the Chair of Logic at the Royal
Irish Academy and was made a member of the Institute of Advanced Studies. He was
able to resume his studies and publication and remained in Dublin until his
death on February 13th, 1956.
By 1917, Lukasiewicz had developed the idea of a three-valued propositional
calculus (true/false/don't know). A by-product of this approach was the now
widely used idea of a "truth table" by which all the possible inputs and outputs
of a logic system can be tabulated. Another major contribution was his
development of "Polish Notation" which simplifies the expression of logical and
arithmetic relationships by eliminating parentheses and other unnecessary
symbols. This was the basis of Reverse Polish Notation (RPN) which is familiar
to users of calculators manufactured by Hewlett-Packard and others. Lukasiewicz
survived long enough to witness the arrival of the computer era and the
application of some of his ideas. But he did not feel that any practical
justification for mathematical and philosophical study was necessary: "As art
grew out of the craving for beauty, science was created by the urge for
knowledge". He regarded the sayings "art for art's sake" and "science for
science's sake" as equally valid.
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