Jacques Riguet

Summary

Jacques Riguet (1921 to October 20, 2013) was a French mathematician known for his contributions to algebraic logic and category theory. According to Gunther Schmidt and Thomas Ströhlein, "Alfred Tarski and Jacques Riguet founded the modern calculus of relations".[1]

Career edit

Already at his lycée, Riguet was impressed by the power of geometric reasoning. He studied Louis Couturat and Bourbaki, who made contributions to logic and set theory.[2] Riguet studied higher mathematics with Albert Châtelet and was introduced to lattices. In 1948 he published "Relations binaires, fermetures, correspondances de Galois"[3] which revived the calculus of binary relations.

He published his thesis Fondements de la Theorie de Relations Binaires in October 1951. In 1954 Riguet gave a plenary address at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Amsterdam, speaking on the applications of binary relations to algebra and machine theory. For a time, Riguet attended the seminary of Jacques Lacan.

Riguet was employed at Centre national de la recherche scientifique until 1957.[2]

Relations edit

In Riguet's work the composition of relations is the basis for characterizing relations, replacing the element-wise descriptions that use logical formulations. For example, he described the Schröder rules. His work was reviewed in Journal of Symbolic Logic by Øystein Ore.[4]

Some of Riguet’s contributions can be described using structure of the logical matrix associated with a relation. If u and v are logical vectors, then their logical outer product produces the associated logical matrix   Riguet calls the associated relation a rectangular relation, and if it happens to be symmetric it is a square relation.[5]

In 1950 he submitted "Sur les ensembles reguliers de relations binaires",[6] and an article on difunctional relations, those with logical matrix in a block diagonal form.[7] The following year he provided an algebraic characterization of heterogeneous relations with a logical matrix comparable to a Ferrers diagram.[8] Since Ferrers diagrams order the partitions of an integer, Riguet extended order theory beyond relations restricted to one set.

In 1954 Riguet described the extension of the calculus of binary relations to a calculus of Boolean matrices.[9][10]

Category theory edit

In 1958 Riguet went to Zurich, working with IBM, studying category theory. He published the following papers on that topic:

  • 1962: "Programmation et theorie des categories", in Proceedings of Symposium on Symbolic Languages and Data Processing, Rome (1961), pp 88–98, Gordon & Breach
  • 1973: "Probabilites et theorie de la decision du point de vue de la theorie des categories" (Amiens colloquium) Cahiers de Topologie et Géométrie Différentielle Catégoriques 14(2)
  • 1975 : "Theorie des jeux et funciones de Grundy du point de vue de la theorie des categories" (TAC-Chantilly) Cahiers de Topologie et Géométrie Différentielle Catégoriques 16(4) : 441
  • 1989 : "Galois correspondences in category theory", Hesselberg-Combinatorics
  • 1992: (with Rene Guitart) Enveloppe Karoubienne et categorie de Kleisli, Cahiers de Topologie et Géométrie Différentielle Catégoriques 33(3) : 261–6, via Numdam.org

Riguet participated in the Séminaire Itinérant des Catégories.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ Schmidt, Gunther; Ströhlein, Thomas (6 December 2012). Relations and Graphs: Discrete Mathematics for Computer Scientists. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 277. ISBN 978-3-642-77968-8.
  2. ^ a b Stephane Dugowson and others Hommage a Jacques Riguet at Google Sites
  3. ^ Bulletin de la Société Mathématique de France 76: 114–55
  4. ^ Journal of Symbolic Logic 16(1): 61
  5. ^ Gunther Schmidt (2013). Relational Mathematics. Cambridge University Press. p. 95. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511778810. ISBN 9780511778810.
  6. ^ Comptes Rendus 231: 936,7
  7. ^ J. Riguet (1950) "Quelques proprietes des relations difonctionelles", Comptes Rendus 230: 1999–2000
  8. ^ "Les relations de Ferrers", Comptes Rendus 232: 1729,30
  9. ^ J. Riguet (1954) "Sur l’extension du calcul du relations binaries au calcul des matrices du algebra de Bool complete", Comptes Rendus 238: 2382–5
  10. ^ Roland Fraisse (1956) Review of Riguet's extension of calculus of relations, Journal of Symbolic Logic 21(4): 397,8 via Project Euclid
  11. ^ Séminaire Itinérant des Catégories (16 November 2013) Hommage du SIC a Jacques Riguet