Nicolas Bourbaki: The Greatest Mathematician Who Never Was
AncientPages.com - By many measures, Nicolas Bourbaki ranks among the greatest mathematicians of the 20th century.
Largely unknown today, Bourbaki is likely the last mathematician to master nearly all aspects of the field. A consummate collaborator, he made fundamental contributions to important mathematical fields such as set theory and functional analysis. He also revolutionized mathematics by emphasizing rigor in place of conjecture.
There’s just one problem: Nicolas Bourbaki never existed.
Never existed?
While it is now widely accepted that there never was a Nicolas Bourbaki, there is evidence to the contrary.
Bourbaki Congress of 1938. Credit: Public Domain
For example, there are wedding announcements for his daughter Betty, a baptismal certificate in his name and an impressive family lineage extending back to an ancestor Napoleon raised as his own son.
Even the professional mathematics community was misled for a time. When Ralph Boas, an editor of the journal Mathematical Reviews, wrote that Bourbaki was a pseudonym, he was promptly refuted by none other than Bourbaki himself. Bourbaki countered with a letter stating that B.O.A.S. actually just was an acronym of the last names of the editors of the Reviews.
These cases of confused identity were not all fun and games. For example, it is alleged that, while visiting Finland at the outset of World War II, French mathematician André Weil was investigated for spying. The authorities found suspicious papers in his possession: a fake identity, a set of business cards and even invitations from the Russian Academy of Science – all in Bourbaki’s name. Supposedly, Weil was freed only after an officer recognized him as a preeminent mathematician.
Who was Bourbaki?
If Bourbaki never existed, who – or what – was he?
The name Nicolas Bourbaki first appeared in a place rocked by turmoil at a volatile time in history: Paris in 1934.
World War I had wiped out a generation of French intellectuals. As a result, the standard university-level calculus textbook had been written more than two and half decades before and was out of date.
Newly minted professors André Weil and Henri Cartan wanted a rigorous method to teach Stokes’ theorem, a key result of calculus. After realizing that others had similar concerns, Weil organized a meeting. It took place December 10, 1934 at a Parisian café called Capoulade.
The nine mathematicians in attendance agreed to write a textbook “to define for 25 years the syllabus for the certificate in differential and integral calculus by writing, collectively, a treatise on analysis,” which they hoped to complete in just six months.
See also:
Hypatia Of Alexandria – Brilliant, Controversial Scientist And Her Dramatic End
Aristotle’s Influence On Education Of Alexander The Great – Historical Encounter Of Two Famous Men
Catherine Of Alexandria Courageously Confronted 50 Pagan Philosophers And Was Sentenced To Death
As a joke, they named themselves after an old French general who had been duped in the Franco-Prussian war.
As they proceeded, their original goal of elucidating Stokes’ theorem expanded to laying out the foundations of all mathematics. Eventually, they began to hold regular Bourbaki “conferences” three times a year to discuss new chapters for the treatise.
Individual members were encouraged to engage with all aspects of the effort, to ensure that the treatise would be accessible to nonspecialists. According to one of the founders, spectators invariably came away with the impression that they were witnessing “a gathering of madmen.” They could not imagine how people, shouting – “sometimes three or four at the same time” – could ever come up with something “intelligent.”
Top mathematicians from across Europe, intrigued by the group’s work and style, joined to augment the group’s ranks. Over time, the name Bourbaki became a collective pseudonym for dozens of influential mathematicians spanning generations, including Weil, Dieudonne, Schwartz, Borel, Grothendieck and many others.
Since then, the group which has added new members over time, has proved to have a profound impact on mathematics, certainly rivaling any of its individual contributors.
Profound impact
Mathematicians have made a plethora of important contributions under Bourbaki’s name.
To name a few, the group introduced the null set symbol; the ubiquitous terms injective, surjective, bijective; and generalizations of many important theorems, including the Bourbaki-Witt theorem, the Jacobson-Bourbaki theorem and the Bourbaki-Banach-Alaoglu theorem.
The Henri Poincaré Institute, where Bourbaki seminars are regularly held. Antoine Taveneaux/Wikimedia, CC BY-SA
Their text, “Elements of Mathematics,” has swelled to more than 6,000 pages. It provides a “solid foundation for the whole body of modern mathematics,” according to mathematician Barbara Pieronkiewicz.
Bourbaki’s influence is still alive and well. Now in “his” 80th year of research, in 2016 “he” published the 11th volume of the “Elements of Mathematics.” The Bourbaki group, with its ever-changing cast of members, still holds regular seminars at the University of Paris.
Partly thanks to the breadth and significance of “his” mathematical contributions, and also because – ageless, unchanging and operating in multiple places at once – “he” seems to defy the very laws of physics, Bourbaki’s mathematical prowess will likely never be equaled.
Written by David Gunderman - Ph.D. Candidate in Applied Mathematics, University of Colorado Boulder
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
More From Ancient Pages
-
Peculiar Accounts Of Ancient Flying Metallic Dragons And Bells In China And Japan
Ancient Mysteries | Dec 27, 2018 -
Ancient Artifacts With Foreign Inscriptions And Unknown Signs Discovered In The American Southwest Reveal An Epic Story
Featured Stories | Jul 11, 2024 -
Abu Erteila’s Lost Temple And The Meroitic Empire: New Discoveries Shed Light On Nubian Civilization
Archaeology | Jan 14, 2016 -
Acheulian Culture Of Ethiopian Highlands And Their Prehistoric Tool Selection To Make Society’s Life Easier
Archaeology | Jan 10, 2025 -
Ancient City Of Troy Was Destroyed By An Earthquake That Ended The Trojan War – Archaeologists Say
Archaeology | Jun 14, 2017 -
‘Incredibly Mysterious’ Bronze Age Gold Penannular Ring Found In Norfolk
Archaeology | Apr 24, 2023 -
Post-Roman Europeans: Ancient DNA Traces The Emergence Of A Complex New Society
Archaeology | Jun 12, 2026 -
Ancient DNA And Tombstones Lead Scientists To Black Death’s Source Strain
Archaeology | Jun 15, 2022 -
Fascinating Ancient And Unexplained Mysteries Of Arizona – Strange, Unknown Creatures, Baffling Vanishings And Anomalies – Part 2
Featured Stories | Oct 1, 2024 -
1,750-Year-Old Fresco Travertines Buried Underground – Recovered In Ancient Laodicea
Archaeology | Mar 19, 2020 -
Cambridge Supports Nigeria’s Claim For Return Of Benin Artefacts From University Collections
Archaeology | Aug 2, 2022 -
Fragments Of Old City’s Fortifications And Carved Hand Imprint Unearthed In Jerusalem
Archaeology | Jan 25, 2023 -
Ancient Maya Used An Unknown And Ingenious Method To Prevent Tooth Decay And Infections – Scientists Say
Archaeology | May 24, 2022 -
Well-Preserved Neolithic Settlement Discovered Near Kutná Hora, Czech Republic
Archaeology | Aug 2, 2024 -
Mead: Secret Drink Of The Vikings And Gods – Was It An Ancient Antibiotic?
News | Feb 21, 2016 -
Islands Of The Tropical Pacific Ocean Were Settled Much Earlier Than Previously Thought – New Theory
Archaeology | Dec 20, 2022 -
Unique Study Of Skeletal Remains Reveals Grave Health Of Australian Pioneer Settlers
Archaeology | Apr 7, 2022 -
X-Rays Reveal Secret From Da Vinci’s Masterpiece Mona Lisa
News | Oct 14, 2023 -
How Extensively Did Early Farmers Utilize Europe’s Rich Forests For Raising Their Livestock?
Archaeology | Nov 13, 2024 -
Orichalcum: Mysterious Metal Linked To Legendary Atlantis Discovered In Shipwreck
Archaeology | Jan 8, 2015


