- Kaplansky, Irving
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▪ 2007Canadian-born American mathematician (b. March 22, 1917, Toronto, Ont.—d. June 25, 2006, Los Angeles, Calif.), made important contributions to such algebraic areas as ring, group, and field theory as well as commutative algebra, and in 1989 he was the winner of the American Mathematical Society's Leroy P. Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement. Kaplansky studied mathematics at the University of Toronto (B.A., 1938; M.A., 1940), where he was a member of the winning team in the first William Lowell Putnam mathematical contest (open to students in Canada and the United States). He was awarded the first Putnam fellowship and used it to attend Harvard University (Ph.D., 1941). That year he also became a U.S. citizen. In 1945 he followed his thesis adviser at Harvard, Saunders Mac Lane, to the University of Chicago, where he served (1962–67) as chairman of the mathematics department. In 1984 he became director of the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute at the University of California, Berkeley, where he remained until 1992. Among his most influential books were Infinite Abelian Groups (1954), Commutative Rings (1970), and Lie Algebras and Locally Compact Groups (1971).
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Universalium. 2010.