Tom Leinster

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Leinster in 2003

Thomas "Tom" Stephen Hampden Leinster (born 1971) is a British mathematician, known for his work on category theory.

Education and career

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Leinster graduated in 2000 with a PhD from the University of Cambridge. His PhD thesis Operads in Higher-Dimensional Category Theory was supervised by Martin Hyland.[1] After teaching at the University of Glasgow, Leinster became, and is now, a professor at the University of Edinburgh. He published textbooks on category theory[2] and higher categories and operads.[3] In the 2010s, he was mainly concerned with a generalisation of the Euler characteristic in category theory, the magnitude. He also considered such generalisations in metric spaces with application in biology (measurement of biodiversity).

Award and honour

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Leinster groups (i.e., finite groups whose order is equal to the sum of the orders of their normal subgroups) are named in his honour.[4] He received the 2019 Chauvenet Prize for Rethinking Set Theory[5] (based upon an axiomatisation published in 1964 by F. William Lawvere).[6] He is a frequent author and moderator for the academic group blog n-Category Café, where topics from mathematics, science and philosophy are discussed, often from the perspective of category theory.[7] International media attention resulted from a 2014 article by Leinster in the New Scientist.[8] Leinster's article called, on the basis of ethics, for mathematicians to refuse to work for intelligence agencies.[9][10][11] In German-speaking countries, this was reported by, among others, Der Spiegel[12] and Zeit Online.[13]

Selected publications

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References

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  1. ^ Tom Leinster at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
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  8. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value). reprint in slate.com
  9. ^ Mathematicians: refuse to work for the NSA!, Boing Boing, 27 April 2014
  10. ^ Mathematicians Push Back Against The NSA, Slashdot, 27 April 2014
  11. ^ Un mathématicien appelle ses collègues à ne plus travailler pour la NSA », Mediapart, 28 avril 2014 lire le texte ici
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