Ottawa Citizen

‘ONE OF THE GIANTS OF MATHEMATIC­S’

Lived life of mysterious isolation since 1991

- MATT SCHUDEL

Alexander Grothendie­ck, whose brilliant mind electrifie­d the world of mathematic­s in the 1950s and 1960s, earning him the equivalent of the Nobel Prize in his field, and who later disappeare­d into a mysterious life of self-imposed isolation, died Nov. 13 at a hospital in Saint- Girons, France. He was 86.

French media reports announced his death. The cause was not disclosed.

Grothendie­ck emerged from a life of exile during the Second World War to become one of the most important mathematic­al thinkers of the 20th century. His contributi­ons to mathematic­s were often likened to those of Albert Einstein in physics.

His nominal specialty was algebraic geometry, which combines elements of both mathematic­al discipline­s, but Grothendie­ck used his remarkable capacity for abstract thinking to make advances across the entire spectrum of mathematic­s.

He developed unifying concepts that could be applied to a variety of avenues of mathematic­al thought, including number theory, category theory, functional analysis and topology.

In 1966, Grothendie­ck was awarded the Fields Medal, considered the world’s highest honour in mathematic­s. Two of his major publicatio­ns, Elements of Algebraic Geometry and Fundamenta­ls of Algebraic Geometry, are so essential to mathematic­ians that they are known simply by their initials in French, EGA and FGA.

“He was one of the giants of mathematic­s, who transforme­d mathematic­s entirely with his work,” Cedric Villani, who won the Fields Medal in 2010, told Agence France-Presse.

As a student, Grothendie­ck once recalled, he was taught how to calculate the volume of a sphere and other geometric shapes, but he sought a deeper understand­ing: the definition of volume itself.

When he embarked on his career, he didn’t concentrat­e on solving age-old puzzles so much as on developing new, simplified approaches to mathematic­al investigat­ion. Other scholars came to apply Grothendie­ck’s theoretica­l frameworks to such fields as computer programmin­g, software developmen­t, satellite communicat­ions, classifica­tion systems and the study of biological data.

His ideas were instrument­al in solving one of the enduring conundrums of mathematic­s, Fermat’s Last Theorem.

In 1637, Pierre de Fermat jotted a mathematic­al notation in the margin of a book, but its proof had baffled the world’s greatest mathematic­al minds for more than three centuries.

Finally, in 1995, British mathematic­ian Andrew Wiles published a proof of the theorem. He arrived at his solution using the principles of algebraic geometry, the field that Grothendie­ck had redefined to its foundation­s.

The circumstan­ces of Grothendie­ck’s birth and childhood are in some doubt, shrouded by the dramas unfolding throughout Europe in the early 20th century.

His father was a Russian-born Jewish anarchist named Alexander Schapiro or possibly Morris Shapiro, who may have been imprisoned for attempting to assassinat­e the czar.

According to different accounts, he was either freed from prison by the Bolsheviks or was arrested by Bolsheviks during the Russian Revolution. Somehow, he managed to escape from Russia despite losing an arm.

His ideas were instrument­al in solving one of the enduring conundrums in mathematic­s, Fermat’s Last Theorum.

He turned up in Berlin in the 1920s as a photograph­er using the name Alexander Tanaroff. He fell in love with a married woman named Johanna “Hanka” Grothendie­ck and told her husband, “I will steal your wife.”

Their illegitima­te son was born in Berlin on March 28, 1928. His name at birth was Alexander Raddatz, the name of Johanna’s husband at the time. The child’s parents later married, but as the Nazi regime took over Germany in 1933, they fled to France.

Young Alexander, however, stayed behind with friends in Hamburg, Germany, until 1939, when he was reunited with his parents in Paris. His father was arrested and sent to the Auschwitz concentrat­ion camp, where he died in 1942.

Grothendie­ck took his mother’s maiden name and lived in various relocation camps until the end of the Second World War. He attended college in Montpellie­r, France, while making a name for himself in mathematic­s. He studied for a doctorate at a university in Nancy, France, but it is unclear whether he received the degree.

He taught in Brazil and at the University of Kansas in the 1950s before taking a position at the French Institute for Advanced Scientific Study near Paris in the late 1950s.

Colleagues noted that he owned very few books, which forced him to solve mathematic­al problems by original and unorthodox methods.

Grothendie­ck was a charismati­c teacher and was guided by a strong sense of social conscience throughout his life. He was fascinated by physics, but he chose to study mathematic­s when he saw the effects of nuclear weapons, which were made possible by advanced physics.

When he received the Fields Medal in 1966, he refused to go to the awards ceremony in Moscow as an act of protest against Soviet militarism and imprisonme­nt of dissident writers. He also opposed U.S. involvemen­t in the Vietnam War and, in the late 1960s, travelled to Hanoi to lead lectures on mathematic­s.

In 1970, he resigned from his academic post when he learned that the institute received funding from the French defence ministry. He later taught at the University of Montpellie­r, but Grothendie­ck grew increasing­ly reclusive and eccentric.

He rejected the Swedish Crafoord Prize in mathematic­s in 1988, then abruptly broke off communicat­ion with colleagues and family in 1991.

He lived in small French villages, often sleeping on the floor and subsisting on a strict vegetarian diet.

He obsessivel­y wrote thousands of pages of reflection­s on the nature of evil and transcribe­d his dreams as an effort to prove the existence of a divine being.

 ?? HIGH SCIENTIFIC STUDIES INSTITUTE VIA AP ?? Alexander Grothendie­ck, standing at the blackboard, during a lesson in the 1960s at IHES (High Scientific Studies Institute) outside Paris. He died on Nov. 13 at age 86.
HIGH SCIENTIFIC STUDIES INSTITUTE VIA AP Alexander Grothendie­ck, standing at the blackboard, during a lesson in the 1960s at IHES (High Scientific Studies Institute) outside Paris. He died on Nov. 13 at age 86.
 ?? JOEL SAGET/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? French mathematic­ian Cedric Villani says Alexander Grothendie­ck “transforme­d mathematic­s entirely.”
JOEL SAGET/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES French mathematic­ian Cedric Villani says Alexander Grothendie­ck “transforme­d mathematic­s entirely.”

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