Literate Lifetime
"Today a reader, tomorrow a leader." -- W. Fusselman
Smarandache, Florentin, 1954-We have 1 book for this author.Florentin Smarandache (born December 10, 1954) is a Romanian-American writer and associate professor of mathematics and science at the University of New Mexico, Gallup, New Mexico.
Smarandache was born in Bălceşti, in the Romanian county of Vâlcea. According to his own autobiographical accounts[1], in 1986 he was refused an exit visa by the Ceauşescu regime that would have allowed him to attend the International Congress of Mathematicians at the University of California, Berkeley. He fled Romania in 1988, leaving behind his son and pregnant wife; after two years in refugee camps in Turkey, he immigrated to the United States in 1990. He was employed as a software engineer at a Honeywell facility in Phoenix, Arizona from 1990 to 1995 and was an adjunct professor at Pima Community College in Tucson from 1995 to 1997. He obtained a doctorate in mathematics from the Moldova State University, in 1997[1][2]. From 1997 to 2003 he was an assistant professor at the University of New Mexico, Gallup. He was promoted to Associate Professor of Mathematics in 2003. Arts and literatureSmarandache has published material classified diversely as art,[3] poems, theatre plays,[4] translations, novels, dramas and fiction in Romanian, French, and English. Some of his literary and philosophical writings are described by him as paradoxical; indeed, Smarandache also describes himself as the leader of an avant-garde movement in the arts and sciences called "paradoxism" which he set up in the 1980's as an anti-totalitarian protest against the regime in Romania.[5][6] According to Smarandache "The goal is to enlarge the artistic sphere through non-artistic elements. ... 'The flying of a bird', for example, represents a "natural poem", that is not necessary to write down, being more palpable and perceptible in any language that some signs laid on the paper, which, in fact, represent an "artificial poem"". Mathematics and philosophyIn mathematical logic Samarandache has promoted the notion of neutrosophy, a generalization of the notion of fuzzy sets, in which each logical variable comes with a probability that it is true, false or undetermined. [7] He has also produced work in other areas of mathematics such as number theory and statistics, with papers on algebraic structures, non-Euclidean geometry and especially information fusion.[8] In number theory Smarandache's name has been attached to various objects. The n-th Smarandache-Wellin number is defined as the concatenation of the first n prime numbers written in decimal notation. The first Smarandache-Wellin numbers are 2, 23, 235, 2357, 235711, ... (sequence A019518 in OEIS). The Smarandache constant x is the positive solution of 127x − 113x = 1. Its value is A Generalized Smarandache Palindrome is a concatenated number of the form: Smarandache has harshly criticized the moderators of ArXiv.org (the most widely used eprint server in mathematics and theoretical physics) who he claims have put him on a "blacklist", moving his submissions to the GM (General Math) category instead of accepting them as contributions to the intended field, or rejecting them outright. Smarandache attributes this to the fact that
Theoretical physicsIn theoretical physics the Smarandache hypothesis promotes the view that, as an extension and consequence of the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox and Bell's inequality, there might be no speed barrier in the Universe.[16] This hypothesis contradicts the generally accepted relativistic bounds on the transmission of information provided by Einstein's theory of relativity.[17] Smarandache's theory is mentioned on Eric Weisstein's World of Physics as an example of several
EditorshipSmarandache is Editor-in-chief of International Journal of Applied Mathematics & Statistics], which is a printed international mathematical journal started in December 2003.[19] He is also Associate Editor of Progress in Physics, an alternative experimental and theoretical physics printed and online journal which was started in 2005 with the Mathematics Department at UNM-Gallup as its address. Notes and references
External linksThis biographical information was gathered from the Florentin_Smarandache page, courtesy of the Wikipedia project. BooksFormules pour l'esprit |
Pick of the DayLists of Interest
Other ways of browsing |
(sequence
as n varies, where
for
, or
, for
, where all
are positive integers of various number of digits in a given base 