|
Julius Anatolyevich Schrader, OP (28 October 192724 August 1998) was a mathematician, cyberneticist, philosopher, and a convert to Roman Catholicism. ==Education and research work== Schrader was born in Dnepropetrovsk, Soviet Union. In 1946, he graduated from the renowned Mechanics and Mathematics Faculty of Moscow State University. He completed his doctoral work in 1949 and in 1950 completed his postdoctoral dissertation on functional analysis. Schrader worked for several years in various scientific and mathematical training institutes in Moscow, before moving to the department of semiotics of the All-Russian Institute of Scientific and Technical Information at the Russian Academy of Sciences in 1961, where he remained until 1989. Schrader conducted foundational work in the early days of computer science and was appointed one of the Institute's Professors of Informatics in 1984. In 1960 Schrader became interested in religion and philosophy, eventually devoting significant time to the formal study of philosophy and obtaining a doctorate in philosophy In 1981. He wrote a number of books on both mathematics and philosophy, including "Equality, the Similarity of the Order" (1970), "Systems and Models" (1980), "The Nature of Biological Knowledge" (1991), "Fundamentals of Ethics" (1993), and "The Values That We Choose" (1999). He also published numerous articles, including in the journal "Problems of Philosophy". In 1989, Schrader moved to a permanent job at the Institute for Information Transmission Problems at the Russian Academy of Sciences. He taught at the Moscow State University in the Mechanics and Mathematics Department and Department of Structural and Applied Linguistics at the Faculty of Philology. He has published about 800 papers. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Julius Anatolyevich Schrader」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|