Joseph Warren Dauben (born December 29, 1944, Santa Monica) is a Herbert H. Lehman Distinguished Professor of History at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.[1] He obtained his PhD from Harvard University in 1972. His PhD thesis The early development of Cantorian Set Theory was supervised by Dirk Struik.[2]
Joseph Dauben | |
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Born | Joseph Warren Dauben December 29, 1944 Santa Monica, California, U.S. |
Education | Harvard University (PhD) |
Occupation | Historian |
Dauben's fields of expertise are the history of science, the history of mathematics, the Scientific Revolution, the sociology of science, intellectual history, the 17th and 18th centuries, the history of Chinese science, and the history of botany.
Dauben is a 1980 Guggenheim fellow.[3]
He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and a fellow of the New York Academy of Sciences (since 1982).[4]
Dauben is an elected member (1991) of the International Academy of the History of Science[5] and an elected foreign member (2001) of German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina.[6]
In 1985–1994 Dauben served as the chair of the Executive Committee of the International Commission on the History of Mathematics.[7]
Dauben delivered an invited lecture at the 1998 International Congress of Mathematicians in Berlin on Karl Marx's mathematical work.[8]
The creator of non-standard analysis, Abraham Robinson was the subject of Dauben's 1995 book Abraham Robinson. It was reviewed positively by Moshé Machover, but the review noted that it avoids discussing any of Robinson's negative aspects, and "in this respect [the book] borders on the hagiographic, painting a portrait without warts."[9]
In 2002 Dauben became an honorary member of the Institute for History of Natural Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.[4][10] In 2012 he received the Albert Leon Whiteman Memorial Prize of the American Mathematical Society (AMS).[11]