Examples of using Janiszewski in English and their translations into Danish
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Official
-
Medicine
-
Financial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Official/political
-
Computer
Janiszewski wrote:… it is my intention to present,
taken up to a large extent with sometimes quite vehement discussions between Janiszewski and Mazurkiewicz, were a real intellectual treat for the participants.
proposed by Janiszewski, and to develop across the whole of the mathematical spectrum.
His father, Czeslaw Janiszewski, was a graduate of the University of Warsaw
In addition to set theory(which at that time included parts of what we call topology today) Janiszewski produced important results in the foundations of mathematics and other parts of topology.
although the intention was for a truly international journal, Janiszewski had quite deliberately decided to make the first volume contain papers by Polish authors only.
the editors had quite deliberately decided to make the first volume contain papers by Polish authors only. Janiszewski wrote.
There he began to get more involved in the study of mathematical logic. Janiszewski and Mazurkiewicz had created in Warsaw by the end of the war one of the strongest schools of mathematics in the world.
suggested Janiszewski, was for groups of mathematicians to concentrate on relatively narrow fields in which Polish mathematicians had common interests
which appeared in 1918, Janiszewski published an article"On the needs of mathematics in Poland",
and Zermelo Janiszewski next went to one of the other leading centres of mathematics in the world, namely Paris.
Kuratowski, who knew Janiszewski well, writes in:
which appeared in 1918, Janiszewski published an article"On the needs of mathematics in Poland",
Janiszewski had made the case for Polish mathematics concentrating on its areas of strength when he wrote his report at the end of World War I. In 1936 a committee was set up by the Polish Academy of Learning to look at the way forward for Polish science.
From the time its reopening the university had rapidly become a leading world centre for topology. Janiszewski and Mazurkiewicz were conducting a topology seminar there from 1917 onwards,
Although it repeats much of what we have already written about Janiszewski it is worth ending this biography by quoting part of the address(see for example):
Janiszewski had been the leader in a move to set up the new journal Fundamenta Mathematicae
sadly one of his supervisors Janiszewski had died in 1920.
Janiszewski had made the case for Polish mathematics concentrating on its areas of strength when he wrote his report at the end of World War I.
Kuratowski attended seminars given by Janiszewski in Warsaw before the end of the war.