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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231128T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231128T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20231115T195911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231115T195911Z
UID:3322-1701183600-1701187200@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Claremont Topology Seminar: Melody Molander (UCSB)
DESCRIPTION:Title: Skein Theory of Affine ADE Subfactor Planar Algebras \nAbstract: Subfactor planar algebras first were constructed by Vaughan Jones as a diagrammatic axiomatization of the standard invariant of a subfactor. These planar algebras also encode two other invariants of the subfactors: the index and the principal graph. The Kuperberg Program asks to find all diagrammatic presentations of subfactor planar algebras. This program has been completed for index less than 4. In this talk\, I will introduce subfactor planar algebras and give some presentations of subfactor planar algebras of index 4 which have affine ADE Dynkin diagrams as their principal graphs.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/claremont-topology-seminar-melody-molander-ucsb/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Topology Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Bahar Acu":MAILTO:Bahar_Acu@pitzer.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231114T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231114T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20231104T140011Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231104T141022Z
UID:3309-1699974000-1699977600@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Geometry and Topology Seminar: Claremont Colleges Course Previews for Spring 2024
DESCRIPTION:On November 14th\, Tuesday from 3-4pm in Fletcher 110\, Geometry and Topology Seminar invites students and faculty to a course preview session devoted to a discussion and presentations about upcoming Spring 2024 courses in \n\ngeometry\,\ntopology and/or\nwith applications in geometry and topology\n\nto help students make their enrollment choices. \nWe will have some refreshments for all attending to enjoy!
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/geometry-and-topology-seminar-claremont-colleges-course-previews-for-spring-2024/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Topology Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Bahar Acu":MAILTO:Bahar_Acu@pitzer.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231113T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231113T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20230913T033213Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231024T191657Z
UID:3216-1699887600-1699891200@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar: Kris Palmieri (University of Chicago)
DESCRIPTION:True Grit: Writing the History of Women at Yerkes Observatory\, 1895–1950 \nAbstract: \nWomen at Yerkes Observatory earned advanced degrees\, conducted their own research\, collaborated on projects with peers of both sexes\, and authored publications in their own names in the first half of the Twentieth Century. Yet Alice Hall Farnsworth\, Mary Murray Hopkins\, Harriet McWilliams Parsons\, and Evelyn Worhnam Wickham – to name only a few – are unknown even amongst specialists. This is in large part because their lives and their labor are all but invisible in published sources and public records. Yet the voices of these women remain preserved in archives across the country – and this presents us with an unparalleled opportunity to reconstruct their lived experiences as women in science. \nThis paper explores the ways in which biography provides a uniquely productive lens for reconstructing the history of women at Yerkes. In so doing\, however\, it also explores the limits of biography for a research project that is anchored by its focus on a specific institutional space and asks how these limits might be overcome.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/history-and-philosophy-of-mathematics-seminar-kris-palmieri/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231107T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231107T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20230916T033519Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231016T154054Z
UID:3239-1699369200-1699372800@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Claremont Topology Seminar: Hyunki Min (UCLA)
DESCRIPTION:Title: Contact structures and the mapping class group of lens spaces \nAbstract: One important problem in contact topology is to classify contact structures on a given manifold. Around 20 years ago\, Giroux and Honda classified contact structures on lens spaces. A natural question to ask after that is how the transformations on lens spaces interact with the contact structures. In this talk\, we study contactomorphisms on lens spaces\, which are diffeomorphisms preserving the contact structure. We show that the contact mapping class group of a standard contact lens space is a subgroup of the mapping class group of the lens space.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/claremont-topology-seminar-hyunki-min-ucla/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Topology Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Bahar Acu":MAILTO:Bahar_Acu@pitzer.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231031T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231031T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20230918T204526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231030T204415Z
UID:3246-1698764400-1698768000@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Claremont Topology Seminar: Konstantinos Varvarezos (UCLA)
DESCRIPTION:Title: Cosmetic Surgeries on Knots and Heegaard Floer Homology \nAbstract: A common method of constructing 3-manifolds is via Dehn surgery on knots. A pair of surgeries on a knot is called purely cosmetic if the resulting 3-manifolds are homeomorphic as oriented manifolds\, whereas it is said to be chirally cosmetic if they result in homeomorphic manifolds with opposite orientations. An outstanding conjecture predicts that no nontrivial knots admit any purely cosmetic surgeries. We apply certain obstructions from Heegaard Floer homology to show that (nontrivial) knots which arise as the closure of a 3-stranded braid do not admit any purely cosmetic surgeries. Furthermore\, we find new obstructions to the existence of chirally cosmetic surgeries coming from Heegaard Floer homology; in particular\, we make use of immersed curve formulations of knot Floer homology and the corresponding surgery formula. Combining these with other obstructions involving finite type invariants\, we completely classify chirally cosmetic surgeries on odd alternating pretzel knots. Moreover\, we rule out cosmetic surgeries for L-space knots along slopes with opposite signs.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/claremont-topology-seminar-konstantinos-varvarezos-ucla/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Topology Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Bahar Acu":MAILTO:Bahar_Acu@pitzer.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231024T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231024T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20230918T204340Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231017T231659Z
UID:3245-1698159600-1698163200@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Claremont Topology Seminar: Wenyuan Li (USC)
DESCRIPTION:Title: Generating families on Lagrangian cobordisms \nAbstract: An important question in contact topology is to understand Legendrian knots and their relations given by Lagrangian cobordisms. In the contact manifold T*M x R\, an important tool to study Legendrian knots and their Lagrangian cobordisms is called generating families or generating functions\, which are generalizations of the defining functions f of graphical Legendrians of the form {(x\, df(x)\, f(x))}. When there exists a generating family with good control at infinity\, interesting Legendrian invariants can be extracted. We try to understand the following basic question: when can a generating function on the Legendrian knot be extended to the Lagrangian cobordism? We will give a necessary and sufficient condition to the problem for generating families with good control at infinity. In particular\, we show that such an extension always exists in the case of Lagrangian concordances.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/claremont-topology-seminar-wenyuan-li-usc/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Topology Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Bahar Acu":MAILTO:Bahar_Acu@pitzer.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231023T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231023T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20230913T033026Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231012T154820Z
UID:3215-1698073200-1698076800@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar: Louis Beaugris (Kean University)
DESCRIPTION:A mathematician and all his functions: The untold story of Lucien Hibbert. \nAbstract: Even with his achievements in mathematics\, academia\, politics\, and international affairs\, Lucien Hibbert is nearly unknown\, even in his native land of Haiti. Our aim is to present a biography of him that includes his family ties\, his education\, his PhD thesis\, and his work in government. His friendships with some of the most recognizable French mathematicians and how they contributed to his efforts in higher education in Haiti are also explored.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/history-and-philosophy-of-mathematics-seminar-louis-beaugris-kean-university/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231010T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231010T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20230915T192038Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231006T052904Z
UID:3238-1696950000-1696953600@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Claremont Topology Seminar: Christopher Perez (Loyola University New Orleans)
DESCRIPTION:Title: Towers and elementary embeddings in total relatively hyperbolic groups \nAbstract: In a remarkable series of papers\, Zlil Sela classified the first-order theories of free groups and torsion-free hyperbolic groups using geometric structures he called towers. It was later proved by Chloé Perin that if H is an elementarily embedded subgroup (or elementary submodel) of a torsion-free hyperbolic group G\, then G is a tower over H. We prove a generalization of Perin’s result to toral relatively hyperbolic groups using JSJ and shortening techniques.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/claremont-topology-seminar-christopher-perez-loyola-university-new-orleans/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Topology Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Bahar Acu":MAILTO:Bahar_Acu@pitzer.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231003T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20231003T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20231006T052456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231006T052910Z
UID:3276-1696345200-1696348800@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Claremont Topology Seminar: Julian Chaidez (USC)
DESCRIPTION:Title: Quantum 4-Manifold Invariants Via Trisections \nAbstract: I will describe a new family of potentially non-semisimple invariants for compact a 4-manifold whose boundary is equipped with an open book. The invariant is computed using a trisection\, along with some additional combing data\, and a piece of algebraic data called a Hopf triple. The relationship with other recent works on non-semisimple 4-manifold invariants\, like the work of Costantino-Geer-Patureau-Mirand-Virelizier\, is not yet clear. This talk is based on joint work with Shawn Cui (Purdue) and Jordan Cotler (Harvard).
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/claremont-topology-seminar-julian-chaidez-usc/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Topology Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Bahar Acu":MAILTO:Bahar_Acu@pitzer.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230926T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230926T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20230922T154321Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230922T154321Z
UID:3251-1695740400-1695744000@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Claremont Topology Seminar: Reginald Anderson (CMC)
DESCRIPTION:Title: Cellular resolutions of the diagonal and exceptional collections for toric Deligne-Mumford stacks (Continued) \nAbstract: Beilinson gave a resolution of the diagonal for complex projective space which yields a strong\, full exceptional collection of line bundles. Bayer-Popescu-Sturmfels generalized Beilinson’s result to a cellular resolution of the diagonal for what they called “unimodular” toric varieties (a more restrictive condition than being smooth)\, which can also be extended to smooth toric varieties and global quotient toric DM stacks of a smooth toric variety by a finite abelian group\, if we allow our resolution to have cokernel which is supported only along the vanishing of the irrelevant ideal. Here we show implications for exceptional collections of line bundles and a positive example for the modified King’s conjecture by giving a strong\, full exceptional collection of line bundles on a smooth\, non-unimodular nef-Fano complete toric surface.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/claremont-topology-seminar-reginald-anderson-cmc-2/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Topology Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Bahar Acu":MAILTO:Bahar_Acu@pitzer.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230919T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230919T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20230915T191657Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230918T204921Z
UID:3237-1695135600-1695139200@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Claremont Topology Seminar: Reginald Anderson (CMC)
DESCRIPTION:Title: Cellular resolutions of the diagonal and exceptional collections for toric Deligne-Mumford stacks \nAbstract: Beilinson gave a resolution of the diagonal for complex projective space which yields a strong\, full exceptional collection of line bundles. Bayer-Popescu-Sturmfels generalized Beilinson’s result to a cellular resolution of the diagonal for what they called “unimodular” toric varieties (a more restrictive condition than being smooth)\, which can also be extended to smooth toric varieties and global quotient toric DM stacks of a smooth toric variety by a finite abelian group\, if we allow our resolution to have cokernel which is supported only along the vanishing of the irrelevant ideal. Here we show implications for exceptional collections of line bundles and a positive example for the modified King’s conjecture by giving a strong\, full exceptional collection of line bundles on a smooth\, non-unimodular nef-Fano complete toric surface.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/claremont-topology-seminar-reginald-anderson-cmc/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Topology Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Bahar Acu":MAILTO:Bahar_Acu@pitzer.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230918T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230918T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20230913T032814Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230914T153118Z
UID:3212-1695049200-1695052800@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar: Amir Alexander (UCLA)
DESCRIPTION:“The Sceptical Mathematician: How John Wallis Saved Mathematics for the Royal Society.” \n  \nAbstract: \nThe members of the “Invisible College” and the early Royal Society championed an experimental approach to the study of nature as the proper path to the advancement of knowledge and the preservation of civic peace. Mathematics\, while admired\, was also viewed with suspicion\, as potentially dogmatic and coercive. John Wallis\, the leading mathematician in the group\, set out to reconcile his field with the ideals of the early Royal Society by developing a radical new approach. Whereas traditional mathematics prided itself on irrefutable deductive proofs\, Wallis’ approach relied on material intuition\, inductive reasoning\, and truth-claims founded on consensus\, not coercion. It was a new mathematics modeled on the Society’s experimental philosophy.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/history-and-philosophy-of-mathematics-seminar-amir-alexander-ucla/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230912T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230912T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20230913T073733Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231006T053002Z
UID:3222-1694530800-1694534400@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Claremont Topology Seminar: Robert Bowden (HMC)
DESCRIPTION:Title: Chebyshev Threadings in Skein Algebras for Punctured Surfaces \nAbstract: Skein algebras are algebras of links in a surface quotiented by diagram-based equivalence relations based on the Kauffman bracket. In the case of surfaces with punctures\, the skein algebra is generated by links as well as arcs between the punctures\, and there are additional skein relations for the arcs. We examine the algebraic structure of the punctured case\, finding a description of the central elements at certain roots of unity. Our construction is closely related to the one for the usual skein algebra\, where central elements come from threading links by Chebyshev polynomials.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/chebyshev-threadings-in-skein-algebras-for-punctured-surfaces-robert-bowden-hmc/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Topology Seminar
ORGANIZER;CN="Bahar Acu":MAILTO:Bahar_Acu@pitzer.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221121T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221121T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20221116T222616Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221116T222616Z
UID:2996-1669042800-1669046400@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:Confronting the Legacy of the Human Betterment Foundation at Caltech 
DESCRIPTION:The Human Betterment Foundation was a pro-eugenics think-tank operating in the 1930s and early 1940s out of Pasadena\, California. Its aim was to influence public and medical opinion in favor of sterilization of “socially undesirable elements”: disabled\, poor\, and racialized people. Many board members had ties to Caltech\, most notably Caltech’s then-president Robert Millikan. Upon the HBF’s disincorporation following its founder E.S. Gosney’s death in 1942\, the HBF’s financial assets were given to Caltech and its records were placed in the Caltech archives.\n\nPlease join us for a brief presentation by Jane Panangaden and collective discussion on the recent activism by Caltech students aimed at bringing the HBF’s activities to light and pushing the Caltech administration to make changes on campus. These changes include both symbolic recognition in the form of renaming buildings which previously honored HBF board members\, to material changes such as improvements to students’ health insurance plans and financial support for racially minoritized scholars. 
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/confronting-the-legacy-of-the-human-betterment-foundation-at-caltech/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221107T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221107T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20221014T174352Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221014T174352Z
UID:2962-1667833200-1667836800@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:The Sceptical Mathematician: How John Wallis Saved Mathematics for the Royal Society (Amir Alexander\, UCLA)
DESCRIPTION:The members of the “Invisible College” and the early Royal Society championed an experimental approach to the study of nature as the proper path to the advancement of knowledge and the preservation of civic peace. Mathematics\, while admired\, was also viewed with suspicion\, as potentially dogmatic and coercive. John Wallis\, the leading mathematician in the group\, set out to reconcile his field with the ideals of the early Royal Society by developing a radical new approach. Whereas traditional mathematics prided itself on irrefutable deductive proofs\, Wallis’ approach relied on material intuition\, inductive reasoning\, and truth-claims founded on consensus\, not coercion. It was a new mathematics modeled on the Society’s experimental philosophy.
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/the-sceptical-mathematician-how-john-wallis-saved-mathematics-for-the-royal-society-amir-alexander-ucla/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221024T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221024T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20221014T173109Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221014T173109Z
UID:2961-1666623600-1666627200@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:H.S.M. Coxeter’s Theory of Accessibility: A Narrative in the Language of Synthetic Projective Geometry (Elena Marchisotto\, Cal State Northridge)
DESCRIPTION:The relation of accessible points in a projective incidence plane defined by Coxeter in the 1960s is the focus of my narrative. It reveals historical pathways bookending the 19th and 20th centuries that bring G.K.C. von Staudt\, Mario Pieri\, Marvin Greenberg and others into the conversation. The published references to Coxeter’s theory\, including his own\, are few. Were it not for his letter to me in the 1980s\, the myriad of interesting mathematical and historical connections emanating from it might have remained in the shadows. My narrative will address how accessible points behave in different types of projective planes partitioned in terms interior/exterior points of conics. Its language pays homage to the invention of geometry\, and shows what can be gained from the power of synthetic methods. \nReferences: \nPambuccian\, V. and Schacht\, C.: The case for the irreducibility of geometry to algebra. Philos. Math. (III) 30\, 1–31 (2022). https://academic.oup.com/philmat/article-abstract/30/1/1/6371269?redirectedFrom=fulltext \nMarchisotto\, E.A. C.: H.S.M. Coxeter’s Theory of Accessibility: From Mario Pieri to Marvin Greenberg. Results in Mathematics 77(5)\, 1-61 (July 2022). DOI: 10.1007/s00025-022-01690-9
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/h-s-m-coxeters-theory-of-accessibility-a-narrative-in-the-language-of-synthetic-projective-geometry-elena-marchisotto-cal-state-northridge/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220919T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220919T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T215940
CREATED:20220912T230200Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220919T154540Z
UID:2918-1663599600-1663603200@colleges.claremont.edu
SUMMARY:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar (organizational meeting and reading discussion)
DESCRIPTION:The first meeting of this semester’s seminar in the history and philosophy of mathematics will take place on Monday\, September 19th from 3 to 4 PM in Avery 202 on the Pitzer Campus (and on zoom). We will spend the time sharing ideas for future meetings and discussing the chapter on “Algebraic Logic” (chapter 9) in Lukas Verburgt’s new book on John Venn: A Life in Logic (a historical book on a philosophical mathematician). Here is the link to the library copy (https://ccl.on.worldcat.org/oclc/1294295070). \n 
URL:https://colleges.claremont.edu/ccms/event/history-and-philosophy-of-mathematics-seminar-organizational-meeting-and-reading-discussion/
LOCATION:Fletcher 110\, Pitzer College\, 1050 N Mills Ave\, Claremont\, CA\, 91711\, United States
CATEGORIES:History and Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR