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John Forbes Nash Jr.

John Forbes Nash, Jr. (June 13, 1928 – May 23, 2015) was an American mathematician who made fundamental contributions to game theory, real algebraic geometry, differential geometry, and partial differential equations.[2][3] Nash and fellow game theorists John Harsanyi and Reinhard Selten were awarded the 1994 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel (popularly known as the Nobel Prize in Economics). In 2015, he and Louis Nirenberg were awarded the Abel Prize for their contributions to the field of partial differential equations.

John Forbes Nash Jr.
Nash in the 2000s
Born(1928-06-13)June 13, 1928
DiedMay 23, 2015(2015-05-23) (aged 86)
Education
Known for
Spouses
Children2[1]
Awards
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
ThesisNon-Cooperative Games (1950)
Doctoral advisorAlbert W. Tucker

As a graduate student in the Mathematics Department at Princeton University, Nash introduced a number of concepts (including Nash equilibrium and the Nash bargaining solution) which are now considered central to game theory and its applications in various sciences. In the 1950s, Nash discovered and proved the Nash embedding theorems by solving a system of nonlinear partial differential equations arising in Riemannian geometry. This work, also introducing a preliminary form of the Nash–Moser theorem, was later recognized by the American Mathematical Society with the Leroy P. Steele Prize for Seminal Contribution to Research. Ennio De Giorgi and Nash found, with separate methods, a body of results paving the way for a systematic understanding of elliptic and parabolic partial differential equations. Their De Giorgi–Nash theorem on the smoothness of solutions of such equations resolved Hilbert's nineteenth problem on regularity in the calculus of variations, which had been a well-known open problem for almost sixty years.

In 1959, Nash began showing clear signs of mental illness, and spent several years at psychiatric hospitals being treated for schizophrenia. After 1970, his condition slowly improved, allowing him to return to academic work by the mid-1980s.[4] His struggles with his illness and his recovery became the basis for Sylvia Nasar's biographical book A Beautiful Mind in 1998, as well as a film of the same name directed by Ron Howard, in which Nash was portrayed by New Zealand Australian actor Russell Crowe.[5][6][7]

Early life and education

John Forbes Nash Jr. was born on June 13, 1928, in Bluefield, West Virginia. His father and namesake, John Forbes Nash Sr., was an electrical engineer for the Appalachian Electric Power Company. His mother, Margaret Virginia (née Martin) Nash, had been a schoolteacher before she was married. He was baptized in the Episcopal Church.[8] He had a younger sister, Martha (born November 16, 1930).[9]

Nash attended kindergarten and public school, and he learned from books provided by his parents and grandparents.[9] Nash's parents pursued opportunities to supplement their son's education, and arranged for him to take advanced mathematics courses at a local community college during his final year of high school. He attended Carnegie Institute of Technology (which later became Carnegie Mellon University) through a full benefit of the George Westinghouse Scholarship, initially majoring in chemical engineering. He switched to a chemistry major and eventually, at the advice of his teacher John Lighton Synge, to mathematics. After graduating in 1948, with both a B.S. and M.S. in mathematics, Nash accepted a fellowship to Princeton University, where he pursued further graduate studies in mathematics and sciences.[9]

Nash's adviser and former Carnegie professor Richard Duffin wrote a letter of recommendation for Nash's entrance to Princeton stating, "He is a mathematical genius".[10][11] Nash was also accepted at Harvard University. However, the chairman of the mathematics department at Princeton, Solomon Lefschetz, offered him the John S. Kennedy fellowship, convincing Nash that Princeton valued him more.[12] Further, he considered Princeton more favorably because of its proximity to his family in Bluefield.[9] At Princeton, he began work on his equilibrium theory, later known as the Nash equilibrium.[13]

Research contributions

 
Nash in November 2006 at a game theory conference in Cologne, Germany

Nash did not publish extensively, although many of his papers are considered landmarks in their fields.[14] As a graduate student at Princeton, he made foundational contributions to game theory and real algebraic geometry. As a postdoctoral fellow at MIT, Nash turned to differential geometry. Although the results of Nash's work on differential geometry are phrased in a geometrical language, the work is almost entirely to do with the mathematical analysis of partial differential equations.[15] After proving his two isometric embedding theorems, Nash turned to research dealing directly with partial differential equations, where he discovered and proved the De Giorgi–Nash theorem, thereby resolving one form of Hilbert's nineteenth problem.

In 2011, the National Security Agency declassified letters written by Nash in the 1950s, in which he had proposed a new encryption–decryption machine.[16] The letters show that Nash had anticipated many concepts of modern cryptography, which are based on computational hardness.[17]

Game theory

Nash earned a PhD in 1950 with a 28-page dissertation on non-cooperative games.[18][19] The thesis, written under the supervision of doctoral advisor Albert W. Tucker, contained the definition and properties of the Nash equilibrium, a crucial concept in non-cooperative games. A version of his thesis was published a year later in the Annals of Mathematics.[20] In the early 1950s, Nash carried out research on a number of related concepts in game theory, including the theory of cooperative games.[21] For his work, Nash was one of the recipients of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1994.

Real algebraic geometry

In 1949, while still a graduate student, Nash found a new result in the mathematical field of real algebraic geometry.[22] He announced his theorem in a contributed paper at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1950, although he had not yet worked out the details of its proof.[23] Nash's theorem was finalized by October 1951, when Nash submitted his work to the Annals of Mathematics.[24] It had been well-known since the 1930s that every closed smooth manifold is diffeomorphic to the zero set of some collection of smooth functions on Euclidean space. In his work, Nash proved that those smooth functions can be taken to be polynomials.[25] This was widely regarded as a surprising result,[22] since the class of smooth functions and smooth manifolds is usually far more flexible than the class of polynomials. Nash's proof introduced the concepts now known as Nash function and Nash manifold, which have since been widely studied in real algebraic geometry.[25][26] Nash's theorem itself was famously applied by Michael Artin and Barry Mazur to the study of dynamical systems, by combining Nash's polynomial approximation together with Bézout's theorem.[27][28]

Differential geometry

During his postdoctoral position at MIT, Nash was eager to find high-profile mathematical problems to study.[29] From Warren Ambrose, a differential geometer, he learned about the conjecture that any Riemannian manifold is isometric to a submanifold of Euclidean space. Nash's results proving the conjecture are now known as the Nash embedding theorems, the second of which Mikhael Gromov has called "one of the main achievements of mathematics of the twentieth century".[30]

Nash's first embedding theorem was found in 1953.[29] He found that any Riemannian manifold can be isometrically embedded in a Euclidean space by a continuously differentiable mapping.[31] Nash's construction allows the codimension of the embedding to be very small, with the effect that in many cases it is logically impossible that a highly-differentiable isometric embedding exists. (Based on Nash's techniques, Nicolaas Kuiper soon found even smaller codimensions, with the improved result often known as the Nash–Kuiper theorem.) As such, Nash's embeddings are limited to the setting of low differentiability. For this reason, Nash's result is somewhat outside the mainstream in the field of differential geometry, where high differentiability is significant in much of the usual analysis.[32][33]

However, the logic of Nash's work has been found to be useful in many other contexts in mathematical analysis. Starting with work of Camillo De Lellis and László Székelyhidi, the ideas of Nash's proof were applied for various constructions of turbulent solutions of the Euler equations in fluid mechanics.[34][35] In the 1970s, Mikhael Gromov developed Nash's ideas into the general framework of convex integration,[33] which has been (among other uses) applied by Stefan Müller and Vladimír Šverák to construct counterexamples to generalized forms of Hilbert's nineteenth problem in the calculus of variations.[36]

Nash found the construction of smoothly differentiable isometric embeddings to be unexpectedly difficult.[29] However, after around a year and a half of intensive work, his efforts succeeded, thereby proving the second Nash embedding theorem.[37] The ideas involved in proving this second theorem are largely separate from those used in proving the first. The fundamental aspect of the proof is an implicit function theorem for isometric embeddings. The usual formulations of the implicit function theorem are inapplicable, for technical reasons related to the loss of regularity phenomena. Nash's resolution of this issue, given by deforming an isometric embedding by an ordinary differential equation along which extra regularity is continually injected, is regarded as a fundamentally novel technique in mathematical analysis.[38] Nash's paper was awarded the Leroy P. Steele Prize for Seminal Contribution to Research in 1999, where his "most original idea" in the resolution of the loss of regularity issue was cited as "one of the great achievements in mathematical analysis in this century".[15] According to Gromov:[30]

You must be a novice in analysis or a genius like Nash to believe anything like that can be ever true and/or to have a single nontrivial application.

Due to Jürgen Moser's extension of Nash's ideas for application to other problems (notably in celestial mechanics), the resulting implicit function theorem is known as the Nash–Moser theorem. It has been extended and generalized by a number of other authors, among them Gromov, Richard Hamilton, Lars Hörmander, Jacob Schwartz, and Eduard Zehnder.[33][38] Nash himself analyzed the problem in the context of analytic functions.[39] Schwartz later commented that Nash's ideas were "not just novel, but very mysterious," and that it was very hard to "get to the bottom of it."[29] According to Gromov:[30]

Nash was solving classical mathematical problems, difficult problems, something that nobody else was able to do, not even to imagine how to do it. ...  what Nash discovered in the course of his constructions of isometric embeddings is far from 'classical' – it is something that brings about a dramatic alteration of our understanding of the basic logic of analysis and differential geometry. Judging from the classical perspective, what Nash has achieved in his papers is as impossible as the story of his life ... [H]is work on isometric immersions ... opened a new world of mathematics that stretches in front of our eyes in yet unknown directions and still waits to be explored.

Partial differential equations

While spending time at the Courant Institute in New York City, Louis Nirenberg informed Nash of a well-known conjecture in the field of elliptic partial differential equations.[40] In 1938, Charles Morrey had proved a fundamental elliptic regularity result for functions of two independent variables, but analogous results for functions of more than two variables had proved elusive. After extensive discussions with Nirenberg and Lars Hörmander, Nash was able to extend Morrey's results, not only to functions of more than two variables, but also to the context of parabolic partial differential equations.[41] In his work, as in Morrey's, uniform control over the continuity of the solutions to such equations is achieved, without assuming any level of differentiability on the coefficients of the equation. The Nash inequality was a particular result found in the course of his work (the proof of which Nash attributed to Elias Stein), which has been found useful in other contexts.[42][43][44][45]

Soon after, Nash learned from Paul Garabedian, recently returned from Italy, that the then-unknown Ennio De Giorgi had found nearly identical results for elliptic partial differential equations.[40] De Giorgi and Nash's methods had little to do with one another, although Nash's were somewhat more powerful in applying to both elliptic and parabolic equations. A few years later, inspired by De Giorgi's method, Jürgen Moser found a different approach to the same results, and the resulting body of work is now known as the De Giorgi–Nash theorem or the De Giorgi–Nash–Moser theory (which is distinct from the Nash–Moser theorem). De Giorgi and Moser's methods became particularly influential over the next several years, through their developments in the works of Olga Ladyzhenskaya, James Serrin, and Neil Trudinger, among others.[46][47] Their work, based primarily on the judicious choice of test functions in the weak formulation of partial differential equations, is in strong contrast to Nash's work, which is based on analysis of the heat kernel. Nash's approach to the De Giorgi–Nash theory was later revisited by Eugene Fabes and Daniel Stroock, initiating the re-derivation and extension of the results originally obtained from De Giorgi and Moser's techniques.[42][48]

From the fact that minimizers to many functionals in the calculus of variations solve elliptic partial differential equations, Hilbert's nineteenth problem (on the smoothness of these minimizers), conjectured almost sixty years prior, was directly amenable to the De Giorgi–Nash theory. Nash received instant recognition for his work, with Peter Lax describing it as a "stroke of genius".[40] Nash would later speculate that had it not been for De Giorgi's simultaneous discovery, he would have been a recipient of the prestigious Fields Medal in 1958.[9] Although the medal committee's reasoning is not fully known, and was not purely based on questions of mathematical merit,[49] archival research has shown that Nash placed third in the committee's vote for the medal, after the two mathematicians (Klaus Roth and René Thom) who were awarded the medal that year.[50]

Mental illness

Although Nash's mental illness first began to manifest in the form of paranoia, his wife later described his behavior as erratic. Nash thought that all men who wore red ties were part of a communist conspiracy against him. He mailed letters to embassies in Washington, D.C., declaring that they were establishing a government.[4][51] Nash's psychological issues crossed into his professional life when he gave an American Mathematical Society lecture at Columbia University in early 1959. Originally intended to present proof of the Riemann hypothesis, the lecture was incomprehensible. Colleagues in the audience immediately realized that something was wrong.[52]

In April 1959, Nash was admitted to McLean Hospital for one month. Based on his paranoid, persecutory delusions, hallucinations, and increasing asociality, he was diagnosed with schizophrenia.[53][54] In 1961, Nash was admitted to the New Jersey State Hospital at Trenton.[55] Over the next nine years, he spent intervals of time in psychiatric hospitals, where he received both antipsychotic medications and insulin shock therapy.[54][56]

Although he sometimes took prescribed medication, Nash later wrote that he did so only under pressure. According to Nash, the film A Beautiful Mind inaccurately implied he was taking atypical antipsychotics. He attributed the depiction to the screenwriter who was worried about the film encouraging people with mental illness to stop taking their medication.[57]

Nash did not take any medication after 1970, nor was he committed to a hospital ever again.[58] Nash recovered gradually.[59] Encouraged by his then former wife, de Lardé, Nash lived at home and spent his time in the Princeton mathematics department where his eccentricities were accepted even when his mental condition was poor. De Lardé credits his recovery to maintaining "a quiet life" with social support.[4]

Nash dated the start of what he termed "mental disturbances" to the early months of 1959, when his wife was pregnant. He described a process of change "from scientific rationality of thinking into the delusional thinking characteristic of persons who are psychiatrically diagnosed as 'schizophrenic' or 'paranoid schizophrenic'".[9] For Nash, this included seeing himself as a messenger or having a special function of some kind, of having supporters and opponents and hidden schemers, along with a feeling of being persecuted and searching for signs representing divine revelation.[60] Nash suggested his delusional thinking was related to his unhappiness, his desire to be recognized, and his characteristic way of thinking, saying, "I wouldn't have had good scientific ideas if I had thought more normally." He also said, "If I felt completely pressureless I don't think I would have gone in this pattern".[61]

Nash reported that he started hearing voices in 1964, then later engaged in a process of consciously rejecting them.[62] He only renounced his "dream-like delusional hypotheses" after a prolonged period of involuntary commitment in mental hospitals—"enforced rationality". Upon doing so, he was temporarily able to return to productive work as a mathematician. By the late 1960s, he relapsed.[63] Eventually, he "intellectually rejected" his "delusionally influenced" and "politically oriented" thinking as a waste of effort.[9] In 1995, he said that he didn't realize his full potential due to nearly 30 years of mental illness.[64]

Nash wrote in 1994:

I spent times of the order of five to eight months in hospitals in New Jersey, always on an involuntary basis and always attempting a legal argument for release. And it did happen that when I had been long enough hospitalized that I would finally renounce my delusional hypotheses and revert to thinking of myself as a human of more conventional circumstances and return to mathematical research. In these interludes of, as it were, enforced rationality, I did succeed in doing some respectable mathematical research. Thus there came about the research for "Le problème de Cauchy pour les équations différentielles d'un fluide général"; the idea that Prof. [Heisuke] Hironaka called "the Nash blowing-up transformation"; and those of "Arc Structure of Singularities" and "Analyticity of Solutions of Implicit Function Problems with Analytic Data".

But after my return to the dream-like delusional hypotheses in the later 60s I became a person of delusionally influenced thinking but of relatively moderate behavior and thus tended to avoid hospitalization and the direct attention of psychiatrists.

Thus further time passed. Then gradually I began to intellectually reject some of the delusionally influenced lines of thinking which had been characteristic of my orientation. This began, most recognizably, with the rejection of politically oriented thinking as essentially a hopeless waste of intellectual effort. So at the present time I seem to be thinking rationally again in the style that is characteristic of scientists.[9]

Recognition and later career

 
Nash pictured in 2011

In 1978, Nash was awarded the John von Neumann Theory Prize for his discovery of non-cooperative equilibria, now called Nash Equilibria. He won the Leroy P. Steele Prize in 1999.

In 1994, he received the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (along with John Harsanyi and Reinhard Selten) for his game theory work as a Princeton graduate student.[65] In the late 1980s, Nash had begun to use email to gradually link with working mathematicians who realized that he was the John Nash and that his new work had value. They formed part of the nucleus of a group that contacted the Bank of Sweden's Nobel award committee and were able to vouch for Nash's mental health and ability to receive the award.[66]

Nash's later work involved ventures in advanced game theory, including partial agency, which show that, as in his early career, he preferred to select his own path and problems. Between 1945 and 1996, he published 23 scientific studies.

Nash has suggested hypotheses on mental illness. He has compared not thinking in an acceptable manner, or being "insane" and not fitting into a usual social function, to being "on strike" from an economic point of view. He advanced views in evolutionary psychology about the potential benefits of apparently nonstandard behaviors or roles.[67]

Nash developed work on the role of money in society. He criticized interest groups that promote quasi-doctrines based on Keynesian economics that permit manipulative short-term inflation and debt tactics that ultimately undermine currencies. He suggested a global "industrial consumption price index" system that would support the development of more "ideal money" that people could trust rather than more unstable "bad money." He noted that some of his thinking parallels that of economist and political philosopher Friedrich Hayek, regarding money and an atypical viewpoint of the function of authority.[68][69]

Nash received an honorary degree, Doctor of Science and Technology, from Carnegie Mellon University in 1999, an honorary degree in economics from the University of Naples Federico II in 2003,[70] an honorary doctorate in economics from the University of Antwerp in 2007, an honorary doctorate of science from the City University of Hong Kong in 2011,[1] and was keynote speaker at a conference on game theory.[71] Nash also received honorary doctorates from two West Virginia colleges: the University of Charleston in 2003 and West Virginia University Tech in 2006. He was a prolific guest speaker at a number of events, such as the Warwick Economics Summit in 2005, at the University of Warwick.

Nash was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2006[72] and became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society in 2012.[73]

On May 19, 2015, a few days before his death, Nash, along with Louis Nirenberg, was awarded the 2015 Abel Prize by King Harald V of Norway at a ceremony in Oslo.[74]

Personal life

In 1951, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) hired Nash as a C. L. E. Moore instructor in the mathematics faculty. About a year later, Nash began a relationship with Eleanor Stier, a nurse he met while admitted as a patient. They had a son, John David Stier,[1] but Nash left Stier when she told him of her pregnancy.[75] The film based on Nash's life, A Beautiful Mind, was criticized during the run-up to the 2002 Oscars for omitting this aspect of his life. He was said to have abandoned her based on her social status, which he thought to have been beneath his.[76]

In Santa Monica, California, in 1954, while in his twenties, Nash was arrested for indecent exposure in a sting operation targeting gay men.[77] Although the charges were dropped, he was stripped of his top-secret security clearance and fired from RAND Corporation, where he had worked as a consultant.[78]

Not long after breaking up with Stier, Nash met Alicia Lardé Lopez-Harrison, a naturalized U.S. citizen from El Salvador. Lardé graduated from MIT, having majored in physics.[9] They married in February 1957. Although Nash was an atheist,[79] the ceremony was performed in an Episcopal church.[80] In 1958, Nash was appointed to a tenured position at MIT, and his first signs of mental illness soon became evident. He resigned his position at MIT in the spring of 1959.[9] His son, John Charles Martin Nash, was born a few months later. The child was not named for a year[1] because Alicia felt that Nash should have a say in choosing the name. Due to the stress of dealing with his illness, Nash and Lardé divorced in 1963. After his final hospital discharge in 1970, Nash lived in Lardé's house as a boarder. This stability seemed to help him, and he learned how to consciously discard his paranoid delusions.[81] Princeton allowed him to audit classes. He continued to work on mathematics and was eventually allowed to teach again. In the 1990s, Lardé and Nash resumed their relationship, remarrying in 2001. John Charles Martin Nash earned a PhD in mathematics from Rutgers University and was diagnosed with schizophrenia as an adult.[80]

Death

On May 23, 2015, Nash and his wife died in a car accident on the New Jersey Turnpike near Exit 8A in Monroe Township, NJ. After a visit to Norway, where Nash had received the Abel Prize, they had made arrangements to be picked up by a limo at Newark Airport. But because of a change in flight plans at the last minute they arrived five hours earlier, and decided to take a taxi instead.[82][83] Their taxicab driver, Tarek Girgis, lost control of the vehicle and struck a guardrail. Both passengers were ejected from the car upon impact. State police revealed that it appeared neither passenger was wearing a seatbelt at the time of the crash.[84][85] At the time of his death, the 86-year-old Nash was a longtime resident of New Jersey. He was survived by two sons, John Charles Martin Nash, who lived with his parents at the time of their death, and elder child John Stier.[86]

Following his death, obituaries appeared in scientific and popular media throughout the world. In addition to their obituary for Nash,[87] The New York Times published an article containing quotes from Nash that had been assembled from media and other published sources. The quotes consisted of Nash's reflections on his life and achievements.[88]

Legacy

At Princeton in the 1970s, Nash became known as "The Phantom of Fine Hall"[89] (Princeton's mathematics center), a shadowy figure who would scribble arcane equations on blackboards in the middle of the night.

He is referred to in a novel set at Princeton, The Mind-Body Problem, 1983, by Rebecca Goldstein.[4]

Sylvia Nasar's biography of Nash, A Beautiful Mind, was published in 1998. A film by the same name was released in 2001, directed by Ron Howard with Russell Crowe playing Nash; it won four Academy Awards, including Best Picture. For his performance as Nash, Crowe won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama and the BAFTA Award for Best Actor. Crowe was also nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance as Nash at the 74th Academy Awards.

Awards

Documentaries and interviews

  • Wallace, Mike (host) (March 17, 2002). "John Nash's Beautiful Mind". 60 Minutes. Season 34. Episode 26. CBS.
  • Samels, Mark (director) (April 28, 2002). "A Brilliant Madness". American Experience. Public Broadcasting Service. Transcript. Retrieved October 11, 2022.
  • Nash, John (September 1–4, 2004). "John F. Nash Jr" (Interview). Interviewed by Marika Griehsel. Nobel Prize Outreach.
  • Nash, John (December 5, 2009). "One on One" (Interview). Interviewed by Riz Khan. Al Jazeera English. (Part 1 on YouTube, Part 2 on YouTube)
  • "Interview with Abel Laureate John F. Nash Jr". Newsletter of the European Mathematical Society. Vol. 97. Interviewed by Martin Raussen and Christian Skau. September 2015. pp. 26–31. ISSN 1027-488X. MR 3409221.{{cite magazine}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)

Publication list

Four of Nash's game-theoretic papers (Nash 1950a, 1950b, 1951, 1953) and three of his pure mathematics papers (Nash 1952b, 1956, 1958) were collected in the following:

References

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  2. ^ Goode, Erica (May 24, 2015). "John F. Nash Jr., Math Genius Defined by a 'Beautiful Mind,' Dies at 86". The New York Times.
  3. ^ "John F. Nash Jr. and Louis Nirenberg share the Abel Prize". Abel Prize. March 25, 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d Nasar, Sylvia (November 13, 1994). "The Lost Years of a Nobel Laureate". The New York Times. Princeton, New Jersey. Retrieved May 6, 2014.
  5. ^ "Oscar race scrutinizes movies based on true stories". USA Today. March 6, 2002. Retrieved January 22, 2008.
  6. ^ "Academy Award Winners". USA Today. March 25, 2002. Retrieved August 30, 2008.
  7. ^ Yuhas, Daisy. "Throughout History, Defining Schizophrenia Has Remained A Challenge (Timeline)". Scientific American Mind. Retrieved March 2, 2013.
  8. ^ Nasar 1998, Chapter 1.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Nash, John F., Jr. (1995). "John F. Nash Jr. – Biographical". In Frängsmyr, Tore (ed.). The Nobel Prizes 1994: Presentations, Biographies & Lectures. Stockholm: Nobel Foundation. pp. 275–279. ISBN 978-9185848249.
  10. ^ (PDF). p. 23. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 7, 2017. Retrieved June 5, 2015.
  11. ^ Kuhn, Harold W.; Nasar, Sylvia (eds.). "The Essential John Nash" (PDF). Princeton University Press. pp. Introduction, xi. Retrieved April 17, 2008.
  12. ^ Nasar 1998, Chapter 2.
  13. ^ Nasar (2002), pp. xvi–xix.
  14. ^ Milnor, John (1998). "John Nash and 'A Beautiful Mind'" (PDF). Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 25 (10): 1329–1332.
  15. ^ a b c "1999 Steele Prizes" (PDF). Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 46 (4): 457–462. April 1999.
  16. ^ "2012 Press Release – National Cryptologic Museum Opens New Exhibit on Dr. John Nash". National Security Agency. Retrieved July 30, 2022.
  17. ^ "John Nash's Letter to the NSA; Turing's Invisible Hand". February 17, 2012. Retrieved February 25, 2012.
  18. ^ Nash, John F. (May 1950). (PDF). PhD thesis. Princeton University. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 20, 2015. Retrieved May 24, 2015.
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  27. ^ Artin, M.; Mazur, B. (1965). "On periodic points". Annals of Mathematics. Second Series. 81 (1): 82–99. doi:10.2307/1970384. JSTOR 1970384. MR 0176482. Zbl 0127.13401.
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  30. ^ a b c Gromov, Misha (2016). "Introduction John Nash: theorems and ideas". In Nash, John Forbes, Jr.; Rassias, Michael Th. (eds.). Open problems in mathematics. Springer, Cham. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-32162-2. ISBN 978-3-319-32160-8. MR 3470099.
  31. ^ Nash 1954.
  32. ^ Eliashberg, Y.; Mishachev, N. (2002). Introduction to the h-principle. Graduate Studies in Mathematics. Vol. 48. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. doi:10.1090/gsm/048. ISBN 0-8218-3227-1. MR 1909245.
  33. ^ a b c Gromov, Mikhael (1986). Partial differential relations. Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete (3). Vol. 9. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. doi:10.1007/978-3-662-02267-2. ISBN 3-540-12177-3. MR 0864505.
  34. ^ De Lellis, Camillo; Székelyhidi, László, Jr. (2013). "Dissipative continuous Euler flows". Inventiones Mathematicae. 193 (2): 377–407. arXiv:1202.1751. Bibcode:2013InMat.193..377D. doi:10.1007/s00222-012-0429-9. MR 3090182. S2CID 2693636.
  35. ^ Isett, Philip (2018). "A proof of Onsager's conjecture". Annals of Mathematics. Second Series. 188 (3): 871–963. doi:10.4007/annals.2018.188.3.4. MR 3866888. S2CID 119267892.
  36. ^ Müller, S.; Šverák, V. (2003). "Convex integration for Lipschitz mappings and counterexamples to regularity". Annals of Mathematics. Second Series. 157 (3): 715–742. doi:10.4007/annals.2003.157.715. MR 1983780. S2CID 55855605.
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  38. ^ a b Hamilton, Richard S. (1982). "The inverse function theorem of Nash and Moser". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. New Series. 7 (1): 65–222. doi:10.1090/s0273-0979-1982-15004-2. MR 0656198. Zbl 0499.58003.
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Bibliography

External links

john, forbes, nash, john, nash, redirects, here, railroad, executive, john, francis, nash, john, forbes, nash, june, 1928, 2015, american, mathematician, made, fundamental, contributions, game, theory, real, algebraic, geometry, differential, geometry, partial. John F Nash redirects here For the railroad executive see John Francis Nash John Forbes Nash Jr June 13 1928 May 23 2015 was an American mathematician who made fundamental contributions to game theory real algebraic geometry differential geometry and partial differential equations 2 3 Nash and fellow game theorists John Harsanyi and Reinhard Selten were awarded the 1994 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel popularly known as the Nobel Prize in Economics In 2015 he and Louis Nirenberg were awarded the Abel Prize for their contributions to the field of partial differential equations John Forbes Nash Jr Nash in the 2000sBorn 1928 06 13 June 13 1928Bluefield West Virginia U S DiedMay 23 2015 2015 05 23 aged 86 Monroe Township New Jersey U S EducationCarnegie Mellon University BS MS Princeton University PhD Known forNash bargaining game Nash blowing up Nash equilibrium Nash embedding theorem Nash functions Nash inequality Nash s theorem Nash Moser theorem Hilbert s nineteenth problem Ideal moneySpousesAlicia Larde Lopez Harrison m 1957 div 1963 wbr m 2001 wbr Children2 1 AwardsJohn von Neumann Theory Prize 1978 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences 1994 Member of the National Academy of Sciences 1996 Abel Prize 2015 Scientific careerFieldsMathematics Cryptography EconomicsInstitutionsMassachusetts Institute of Technology Princeton UniversityThesisNon Cooperative Games 1950 Doctoral advisorAlbert W TuckerAs a graduate student in the Mathematics Department at Princeton University Nash introduced a number of concepts including Nash equilibrium and the Nash bargaining solution which are now considered central to game theory and its applications in various sciences In the 1950s Nash discovered and proved the Nash embedding theorems by solving a system of nonlinear partial differential equations arising in Riemannian geometry This work also introducing a preliminary form of the Nash Moser theorem was later recognized by the American Mathematical Society with the Leroy P Steele Prize for Seminal Contribution to Research Ennio De Giorgi and Nash found with separate methods a body of results paving the way for a systematic understanding of elliptic and parabolic partial differential equations Their De Giorgi Nash theorem on the smoothness of solutions of such equations resolved Hilbert s nineteenth problem on regularity in the calculus of variations which had been a well known open problem for almost sixty years In 1959 Nash began showing clear signs of mental illness and spent several years at psychiatric hospitals being treated for schizophrenia After 1970 his condition slowly improved allowing him to return to academic work by the mid 1980s 4 His struggles with his illness and his recovery became the basis for Sylvia Nasar s biographical book A Beautiful Mind in 1998 as well as a film of the same name directed by Ron Howard in which Nash was portrayed by New Zealand Australian actor Russell Crowe 5 6 7 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Research contributions 2 1 Game theory 2 2 Real algebraic geometry 2 3 Differential geometry 2 4 Partial differential equations 3 Mental illness 4 Recognition and later career 5 Personal life 6 Death 7 Legacy 8 Awards 9 Documentaries and interviews 10 Publication list 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksEarly life and education EditJohn Forbes Nash Jr was born on June 13 1928 in Bluefield West Virginia His father and namesake John Forbes Nash Sr was an electrical engineer for the Appalachian Electric Power Company His mother Margaret Virginia nee Martin Nash had been a schoolteacher before she was married He was baptized in the Episcopal Church 8 He had a younger sister Martha born November 16 1930 9 Nash attended kindergarten and public school and he learned from books provided by his parents and grandparents 9 Nash s parents pursued opportunities to supplement their son s education and arranged for him to take advanced mathematics courses at a local community college during his final year of high school He attended Carnegie Institute of Technology which later became Carnegie Mellon University through a full benefit of the George Westinghouse Scholarship initially majoring in chemical engineering He switched to a chemistry major and eventually at the advice of his teacher John Lighton Synge to mathematics After graduating in 1948 with both a B S and M S in mathematics Nash accepted a fellowship to Princeton University where he pursued further graduate studies in mathematics and sciences 9 Nash s adviser and former Carnegie professor Richard Duffin wrote a letter of recommendation for Nash s entrance to Princeton stating He is a mathematical genius 10 11 Nash was also accepted at Harvard University However the chairman of the mathematics department at Princeton Solomon Lefschetz offered him the John S Kennedy fellowship convincing Nash that Princeton valued him more 12 Further he considered Princeton more favorably because of its proximity to his family in Bluefield 9 At Princeton he began work on his equilibrium theory later known as the Nash equilibrium 13 Research contributions Edit Nash in November 2006 at a game theory conference in Cologne Germany Nash did not publish extensively although many of his papers are considered landmarks in their fields 14 As a graduate student at Princeton he made foundational contributions to game theory and real algebraic geometry As a postdoctoral fellow at MIT Nash turned to differential geometry Although the results of Nash s work on differential geometry are phrased in a geometrical language the work is almost entirely to do with the mathematical analysis of partial differential equations 15 After proving his two isometric embedding theorems Nash turned to research dealing directly with partial differential equations where he discovered and proved the De Giorgi Nash theorem thereby resolving one form of Hilbert s nineteenth problem In 2011 the National Security Agency declassified letters written by Nash in the 1950s in which he had proposed a new encryption decryption machine 16 The letters show that Nash had anticipated many concepts of modern cryptography which are based on computational hardness 17 Game theory Edit Nash earned a PhD in 1950 with a 28 page dissertation on non cooperative games 18 19 The thesis written under the supervision of doctoral advisor Albert W Tucker contained the definition and properties of the Nash equilibrium a crucial concept in non cooperative games A version of his thesis was published a year later in the Annals of Mathematics 20 In the early 1950s Nash carried out research on a number of related concepts in game theory including the theory of cooperative games 21 For his work Nash was one of the recipients of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1994 Real algebraic geometry Edit In 1949 while still a graduate student Nash found a new result in the mathematical field of real algebraic geometry 22 He announced his theorem in a contributed paper at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1950 although he had not yet worked out the details of its proof 23 Nash s theorem was finalized by October 1951 when Nash submitted his work to the Annals of Mathematics 24 It had been well known since the 1930s that every closed smooth manifold is diffeomorphic to the zero set of some collection of smooth functions on Euclidean space In his work Nash proved that those smooth functions can be taken to be polynomials 25 This was widely regarded as a surprising result 22 since the class of smooth functions and smooth manifolds is usually far more flexible than the class of polynomials Nash s proof introduced the concepts now known as Nash function and Nash manifold which have since been widely studied in real algebraic geometry 25 26 Nash s theorem itself was famously applied by Michael Artin and Barry Mazur to the study of dynamical systems by combining Nash s polynomial approximation together with Bezout s theorem 27 28 Differential geometry Edit During his postdoctoral position at MIT Nash was eager to find high profile mathematical problems to study 29 From Warren Ambrose a differential geometer he learned about the conjecture that any Riemannian manifold is isometric to a submanifold of Euclidean space Nash s results proving the conjecture are now known as the Nash embedding theorems the second of which Mikhael Gromov has called one of the main achievements of mathematics of the twentieth century 30 Nash s first embedding theorem was found in 1953 29 He found that any Riemannian manifold can be isometrically embedded in a Euclidean space by a continuously differentiable mapping 31 Nash s construction allows the codimension of the embedding to be very small with the effect that in many cases it is logically impossible that a highly differentiable isometric embedding exists Based on Nash s techniques Nicolaas Kuiper soon found even smaller codimensions with the improved result often known as the Nash Kuiper theorem As such Nash s embeddings are limited to the setting of low differentiability For this reason Nash s result is somewhat outside the mainstream in the field of differential geometry where high differentiability is significant in much of the usual analysis 32 33 However the logic of Nash s work has been found to be useful in many other contexts in mathematical analysis Starting with work of Camillo De Lellis and Laszlo Szekelyhidi the ideas of Nash s proof were applied for various constructions of turbulent solutions of the Euler equations in fluid mechanics 34 35 In the 1970s Mikhael Gromov developed Nash s ideas into the general framework of convex integration 33 which has been among other uses applied by Stefan Muller and Vladimir Sverak to construct counterexamples to generalized forms of Hilbert s nineteenth problem in the calculus of variations 36 Nash found the construction of smoothly differentiable isometric embeddings to be unexpectedly difficult 29 However after around a year and a half of intensive work his efforts succeeded thereby proving the second Nash embedding theorem 37 The ideas involved in proving this second theorem are largely separate from those used in proving the first The fundamental aspect of the proof is an implicit function theorem for isometric embeddings The usual formulations of the implicit function theorem are inapplicable for technical reasons related to the loss of regularity phenomena Nash s resolution of this issue given by deforming an isometric embedding by an ordinary differential equation along which extra regularity is continually injected is regarded as a fundamentally novel technique in mathematical analysis 38 Nash s paper was awarded the Leroy P Steele Prize for Seminal Contribution to Research in 1999 where his most original idea in the resolution of the loss of regularity issue was cited as one of the great achievements in mathematical analysis in this century 15 According to Gromov 30 You must be a novice in analysis or a genius like Nash to believe anything like that can be ever true and or to have a single nontrivial application Due to Jurgen Moser s extension of Nash s ideas for application to other problems notably in celestial mechanics the resulting implicit function theorem is known as the Nash Moser theorem It has been extended and generalized by a number of other authors among them Gromov Richard Hamilton Lars Hormander Jacob Schwartz and Eduard Zehnder 33 38 Nash himself analyzed the problem in the context of analytic functions 39 Schwartz later commented that Nash s ideas were not just novel but very mysterious and that it was very hard to get to the bottom of it 29 According to Gromov 30 Nash was solving classical mathematical problems difficult problems something that nobody else was able to do not even to imagine how to do it what Nash discovered in the course of his constructions of isometric embeddings is far from classical it is something that brings about a dramatic alteration of our understanding of the basic logic of analysis and differential geometry Judging from the classical perspective what Nash has achieved in his papers is as impossible as the story of his life H is work on isometric immersions opened a new world of mathematics that stretches in front of our eyes in yet unknown directions and still waits to be explored Partial differential equations Edit While spending time at the Courant Institute in New York City Louis Nirenberg informed Nash of a well known conjecture in the field of elliptic partial differential equations 40 In 1938 Charles Morrey had proved a fundamental elliptic regularity result for functions of two independent variables but analogous results for functions of more than two variables had proved elusive After extensive discussions with Nirenberg and Lars Hormander Nash was able to extend Morrey s results not only to functions of more than two variables but also to the context of parabolic partial differential equations 41 In his work as in Morrey s uniform control over the continuity of the solutions to such equations is achieved without assuming any level of differentiability on the coefficients of the equation The Nash inequality was a particular result found in the course of his work the proof of which Nash attributed to Elias Stein which has been found useful in other contexts 42 43 44 45 Soon after Nash learned from Paul Garabedian recently returned from Italy that the then unknown Ennio De Giorgi had found nearly identical results for elliptic partial differential equations 40 De Giorgi and Nash s methods had little to do with one another although Nash s were somewhat more powerful in applying to both elliptic and parabolic equations A few years later inspired by De Giorgi s method Jurgen Moser found a different approach to the same results and the resulting body of work is now known as the De Giorgi Nash theorem or the De Giorgi Nash Moser theory which is distinct from the Nash Moser theorem De Giorgi and Moser s methods became particularly influential over the next several years through their developments in the works of Olga Ladyzhenskaya James Serrin and Neil Trudinger among others 46 47 Their work based primarily on the judicious choice of test functions in the weak formulation of partial differential equations is in strong contrast to Nash s work which is based on analysis of the heat kernel Nash s approach to the De Giorgi Nash theory was later revisited by Eugene Fabes and Daniel Stroock initiating the re derivation and extension of the results originally obtained from De Giorgi and Moser s techniques 42 48 From the fact that minimizers to many functionals in the calculus of variations solve elliptic partial differential equations Hilbert s nineteenth problem on the smoothness of these minimizers conjectured almost sixty years prior was directly amenable to the De Giorgi Nash theory Nash received instant recognition for his work with Peter Lax describing it as a stroke of genius 40 Nash would later speculate that had it not been for De Giorgi s simultaneous discovery he would have been a recipient of the prestigious Fields Medal in 1958 9 Although the medal committee s reasoning is not fully known and was not purely based on questions of mathematical merit 49 archival research has shown that Nash placed third in the committee s vote for the medal after the two mathematicians Klaus Roth and Rene Thom who were awarded the medal that year 50 Mental illness EditAlthough Nash s mental illness first began to manifest in the form of paranoia his wife later described his behavior as erratic Nash thought that all men who wore red ties were part of a communist conspiracy against him He mailed letters to embassies in Washington D C declaring that they were establishing a government 4 51 Nash s psychological issues crossed into his professional life when he gave an American Mathematical Society lecture at Columbia University in early 1959 Originally intended to present proof of the Riemann hypothesis the lecture was incomprehensible Colleagues in the audience immediately realized that something was wrong 52 In April 1959 Nash was admitted to McLean Hospital for one month Based on his paranoid persecutory delusions hallucinations and increasing asociality he was diagnosed with schizophrenia 53 54 In 1961 Nash was admitted to the New Jersey State Hospital at Trenton 55 Over the next nine years he spent intervals of time in psychiatric hospitals where he received both antipsychotic medications and insulin shock therapy 54 56 Although he sometimes took prescribed medication Nash later wrote that he did so only under pressure According to Nash the film A Beautiful Mind inaccurately implied he was taking atypical antipsychotics He attributed the depiction to the screenwriter who was worried about the film encouraging people with mental illness to stop taking their medication 57 Nash did not take any medication after 1970 nor was he committed to a hospital ever again 58 Nash recovered gradually 59 Encouraged by his then former wife de Larde Nash lived at home and spent his time in the Princeton mathematics department where his eccentricities were accepted even when his mental condition was poor De Larde credits his recovery to maintaining a quiet life with social support 4 Nash dated the start of what he termed mental disturbances to the early months of 1959 when his wife was pregnant He described a process of change from scientific rationality of thinking into the delusional thinking characteristic of persons who are psychiatrically diagnosed as schizophrenic or paranoid schizophrenic 9 For Nash this included seeing himself as a messenger or having a special function of some kind of having supporters and opponents and hidden schemers along with a feeling of being persecuted and searching for signs representing divine revelation 60 Nash suggested his delusional thinking was related to his unhappiness his desire to be recognized and his characteristic way of thinking saying I wouldn t have had good scientific ideas if I had thought more normally He also said If I felt completely pressureless I don t think I would have gone in this pattern 61 Nash reported that he started hearing voices in 1964 then later engaged in a process of consciously rejecting them 62 He only renounced his dream like delusional hypotheses after a prolonged period of involuntary commitment in mental hospitals enforced rationality Upon doing so he was temporarily able to return to productive work as a mathematician By the late 1960s he relapsed 63 Eventually he intellectually rejected his delusionally influenced and politically oriented thinking as a waste of effort 9 In 1995 he said that he didn t realize his full potential due to nearly 30 years of mental illness 64 Nash wrote in 1994 I spent times of the order of five to eight months in hospitals in New Jersey always on an involuntary basis and always attempting a legal argument for release And it did happen that when I had been long enough hospitalized that I would finally renounce my delusional hypotheses and revert to thinking of myself as a human of more conventional circumstances and return to mathematical research In these interludes of as it were enforced rationality I did succeed in doing some respectable mathematical research Thus there came about the research for Le probleme de Cauchy pour les equations differentielles d un fluide general the idea that Prof Heisuke Hironaka called the Nash blowing up transformation and those of Arc Structure of Singularities and Analyticity of Solutions of Implicit Function Problems with Analytic Data But after my return to the dream like delusional hypotheses in the later 60s I became a person of delusionally influenced thinking but of relatively moderate behavior and thus tended to avoid hospitalization and the direct attention of psychiatrists Thus further time passed Then gradually I began to intellectually reject some of the delusionally influenced lines of thinking which had been characteristic of my orientation This began most recognizably with the rejection of politically oriented thinking as essentially a hopeless waste of intellectual effort So at the present time I seem to be thinking rationally again in the style that is characteristic of scientists 9 Recognition and later career Edit Nash pictured in 2011 In 1978 Nash was awarded the John von Neumann Theory Prize for his discovery of non cooperative equilibria now called Nash Equilibria He won the Leroy P Steele Prize in 1999 In 1994 he received the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences along with John Harsanyi and Reinhard Selten for his game theory work as a Princeton graduate student 65 In the late 1980s Nash had begun to use email to gradually link with working mathematicians who realized that he was the John Nash and that his new work had value They formed part of the nucleus of a group that contacted the Bank of Sweden s Nobel award committee and were able to vouch for Nash s mental health and ability to receive the award 66 Nash s later work involved ventures in advanced game theory including partial agency which show that as in his early career he preferred to select his own path and problems Between 1945 and 1996 he published 23 scientific studies Nash has suggested hypotheses on mental illness He has compared not thinking in an acceptable manner or being insane and not fitting into a usual social function to being on strike from an economic point of view He advanced views in evolutionary psychology about the potential benefits of apparently nonstandard behaviors or roles 67 Nash developed work on the role of money in society He criticized interest groups that promote quasi doctrines based on Keynesian economics that permit manipulative short term inflation and debt tactics that ultimately undermine currencies He suggested a global industrial consumption price index system that would support the development of more ideal money that people could trust rather than more unstable bad money He noted that some of his thinking parallels that of economist and political philosopher Friedrich Hayek regarding money and an atypical viewpoint of the function of authority 68 69 Nash received an honorary degree Doctor of Science and Technology from Carnegie Mellon University in 1999 an honorary degree in economics from the University of Naples Federico II in 2003 70 an honorary doctorate in economics from the University of Antwerp in 2007 an honorary doctorate of science from the City University of Hong Kong in 2011 1 and was keynote speaker at a conference on game theory 71 Nash also received honorary doctorates from two West Virginia colleges the University of Charleston in 2003 and West Virginia University Tech in 2006 He was a prolific guest speaker at a number of events such as the Warwick Economics Summit in 2005 at the University of Warwick Nash was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2006 72 and became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society in 2012 73 On May 19 2015 a few days before his death Nash along with Louis Nirenberg was awarded the 2015 Abel Prize by King Harald V of Norway at a ceremony in Oslo 74 Personal life EditIn 1951 the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT hired Nash as a C L E Moore instructor in the mathematics faculty About a year later Nash began a relationship with Eleanor Stier a nurse he met while admitted as a patient They had a son John David Stier 1 but Nash left Stier when she told him of her pregnancy 75 The film based on Nash s life A Beautiful Mind was criticized during the run up to the 2002 Oscars for omitting this aspect of his life He was said to have abandoned her based on her social status which he thought to have been beneath his 76 In Santa Monica California in 1954 while in his twenties Nash was arrested for indecent exposure in a sting operation targeting gay men 77 Although the charges were dropped he was stripped of his top secret security clearance and fired from RAND Corporation where he had worked as a consultant 78 Not long after breaking up with Stier Nash met Alicia Larde Lopez Harrison a naturalized U S citizen from El Salvador Larde graduated from MIT having majored in physics 9 They married in February 1957 Although Nash was an atheist 79 the ceremony was performed in an Episcopal church 80 In 1958 Nash was appointed to a tenured position at MIT and his first signs of mental illness soon became evident He resigned his position at MIT in the spring of 1959 9 His son John Charles Martin Nash was born a few months later The child was not named for a year 1 because Alicia felt that Nash should have a say in choosing the name Due to the stress of dealing with his illness Nash and Larde divorced in 1963 After his final hospital discharge in 1970 Nash lived in Larde s house as a boarder This stability seemed to help him and he learned how to consciously discard his paranoid delusions 81 Princeton allowed him to audit classes He continued to work on mathematics and was eventually allowed to teach again In the 1990s Larde and Nash resumed their relationship remarrying in 2001 John Charles Martin Nash earned a PhD in mathematics from Rutgers University and was diagnosed with schizophrenia as an adult 80 Death EditOn May 23 2015 Nash and his wife died in a car accident on the New Jersey Turnpike near Exit 8A in Monroe Township NJ After a visit to Norway where Nash had received the Abel Prize they had made arrangements to be picked up by a limo at Newark Airport But because of a change in flight plans at the last minute they arrived five hours earlier and decided to take a taxi instead 82 83 Their taxicab driver Tarek Girgis lost control of the vehicle and struck a guardrail Both passengers were ejected from the car upon impact State police revealed that it appeared neither passenger was wearing a seatbelt at the time of the crash 84 85 At the time of his death the 86 year old Nash was a longtime resident of New Jersey He was survived by two sons John Charles Martin Nash who lived with his parents at the time of their death and elder child John Stier 86 Following his death obituaries appeared in scientific and popular media throughout the world In addition to their obituary for Nash 87 The New York Times published an article containing quotes from Nash that had been assembled from media and other published sources The quotes consisted of Nash s reflections on his life and achievements 88 Legacy EditAt Princeton in the 1970s Nash became known as The Phantom of Fine Hall 89 Princeton s mathematics center a shadowy figure who would scribble arcane equations on blackboards in the middle of the night He is referred to in a novel set at Princeton The Mind Body Problem 1983 by Rebecca Goldstein 4 Sylvia Nasar s biography of Nash A Beautiful Mind was published in 1998 A film by the same name was released in 2001 directed by Ron Howard with Russell Crowe playing Nash it won four Academy Awards including Best Picture For his performance as Nash Crowe won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor Motion Picture Drama and the BAFTA Award for Best Actor Crowe was also nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance as Nash at the 74th Academy Awards Awards Edit1978 INFORMS John von Neumann Theory Prize with Carlton Lemke 90 for their outstanding contributions to the theory of games 1994 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel with John Harsanyi and Reinhard Selten 91 for their pioneering analysis of equilibria in the theory of non cooperative games 1999 Leroy P Steele Prize for Seminal Contribution to Research 15 for his 1956 paper The imbedding problem for Riemannian manifolds 2002 class of Fellows of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences 92 2010 Double Helix Medal 93 2015 Abel Prize with Louis Nirenberg 94 for striking and seminal contributions to the theory of nonlinear partial differential equations and its applications to geometric analysis Documentaries and interviews EditWallace Mike host March 17 2002 John Nash s Beautiful Mind 60 Minutes Season 34 Episode 26 CBS Samels Mark director April 28 2002 A Brilliant Madness American Experience Public Broadcasting Service Transcript Retrieved October 11 2022 Nash John September 1 4 2004 John F Nash Jr Interview Interviewed by Marika Griehsel Nobel Prize Outreach Nash John December 5 2009 One on One Interview Interviewed by Riz Khan Al Jazeera English Part 1 on YouTube Part 2 on YouTube Interview with Abel Laureate John F Nash Jr Newsletter of the European Mathematical Society Vol 97 Interviewed by Martin Raussen and Christian Skau September 2015 pp 26 31 ISSN 1027 488X MR 3409221 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a CS1 maint date and year link Publication list EditNash John F Nash John F Jr 1945 Sag and tension calculations for cable and wire spans using catenary formulas Transactions of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers 64 10 685 692 doi 10 1109 T AIEE 1945 5059021 S2CID 51640174 Nash John F Jr 1950a The bargaining problem Econometrica 18 2 155 162 doi 10 2307 1907266 JSTOR 1907266 MR 0035977 S2CID 153422092 Zbl 1202 91122 Nash John F Jr 1950b Equilibrium points in n person games Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 36 1 48 49 Bibcode 1950PNAS 36 48N doi 10 1073 pnas 36 1 48 MR 0031701 PMC 1063129 PMID 16588946 Zbl 0036 01104 Nash J F Shapley L S 1950 A simple three person poker game In Kuhn H W Tucker A W eds Contributions to the Theory of Games Volume I Annals of Mathematics Studies Vol 24 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 105 116 doi 10 1515 9781400881727 011 MR 0039223 Zbl 0041 25602 Nash John 1951 Non cooperative games Annals of Mathematics Second Series 54 2 286 295 doi 10 2307 1969529 JSTOR 1969529 MR 0043432 Zbl 0045 08202 Nash John 1952a Algebraic approximations of manifolds In Graves Lawrence M Hille Einar Smith Paul A Zariski Oscar eds Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians Cambridge Massachusetts U S A 1950 Volume I Providence RI American Mathematical Society pp 516 517 Nash John 1952b Real algebraic manifolds Annals of Mathematics Second Series 56 3 405 421 doi 10 2307 1969649 JSTOR 1969649 MR 0050928 Zbl 0048 38501 Nash John 1953 Two person cooperative games Econometrica 21 1 128 140 doi 10 2307 1906951 JSTOR 1906951 MR 0053471 Zbl 0050 14102 Mayberry J P Nash J F Shubik M 1953 A comparison of treatments of a duopoly situation Econometrica 21 1 141 154 doi 10 2307 1906952 JSTOR 1906952 MR 3363438 S2CID 154750660 Zbl 0050 15104 Nash John 1954 C1 isometric imbeddings Annals of Mathematics Second Series 60 3 383 396 doi 10 2307 1969840 JSTOR 1969840 MR 0065993 Zbl 0058 37703 Kalisch G K Milnor J W Nash J F Nering E D 1954 Some experimental n person games In Thrall R M Coombs C H Davis R L eds Decision Processes New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 301 327 MR 3363439 Zbl 0058 13904 Nash John 1955 A path space and the Stiefel Whitney classes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 41 5 320 321 Bibcode 1955PNAS 41 320N doi 10 1073 pnas 41 5 320 MR 0071081 PMC 528087 PMID 16589673 Zbl 0064 17503 Nash John 1956 The imbedding problem for Riemannian manifolds Annals of Mathematics Second Series 63 1 20 63 doi 10 2307 1969989 JSTOR 1969989 MR 0075639 Zbl 0070 38603 Nash John 1957 Parabolic equations Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 43 8 754 758 Bibcode 1957PNAS 43 754N doi 10 1073 pnas 43 8 754 MR 0089986 PMC 528534 PMID 16590082 Zbl 0078 08704 Nash J 1958 Continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations American Journal of Mathematics 80 4 931 954 Bibcode 1958AmJM 80 931N doi 10 2307 2372841 JSTOR 2372841 MR 0100158 Zbl 0096 06902 Nash John 1962 Le probleme de Cauchy pour les equations differentielles d un fluide general Bulletin de la Societe Mathematique de France 90 487 497 doi 10 24033 bsmf 1586 MR 0149094 Zbl 0113 19405 Nash J 1966 Analyticity of the solutions of implicit function problems with analytic data Annals of Mathematics Second Series 84 3 345 355 doi 10 2307 1970448 JSTOR 1970448 MR 0205266 Zbl 0173 09202 Nash John F Jr 1995 Arc structure of singularities Duke Mathematical Journal 81 1 31 38 doi 10 1215 S0012 7094 95 08103 4 MR 1381967 Zbl 0880 14010 Nash John 2002a Ideal money Southern Economic Journal 69 1 4 11 doi 10 2307 1061553 JSTOR 1061553 Nash John F Jr 2008 The agencies method for modeling coalitions and cooperation in games International Game Theory Review 10 4 539 564 doi 10 1142 S0219198908002084 MR 2510706 Zbl 1178 91019 Nash John F 2009a Ideal money and asymptotically ideal money In Petrosjan Leon A Zenkevich Nikolay A eds Contributions to Game Theory and Management Volume II St Petersburg Graduate School of Management St Petersburg University pp 281 293 ISBN 978 5 9924 0020 5 MR 2605109 Zbl 1184 91147 Nash John F 2009b Studying cooperative games using the method of agencies International Journal of Mathematics Game Theory and Algebra 18 4 5 413 426 MR 2642155 Zbl 1293 91015 Nash John F Jr Nagel Rosemarie Ockenfels Axel Selten Reinhard 2012 The agencies method for coalition formation in experimental games Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109 50 20358 20363 Bibcode 2012PNAS 10920358N doi 10 1073 pnas 1216361109 PMC 3528550 PMID 23175792 Four of Nash s game theoretic papers Nash 1950a 1950b 1951 1953 and three of his pure mathematics papers Nash 1952b 1956 1958 were collected in the following Kuhn Harold W Nasar Sylvia eds 2002 The essential John Nash Princeton NJ Princeton University Press doi 10 1515 9781400884087 ISBN 0 691 09527 2 MR 1888522 Zbl 1033 01024 References Edit a b c d Suellentrop Chris December 21 2001 A Real Number Slate Archived from the original on January 4 2014 Retrieved May 28 2015 A Beautiful Mind s John Nash is nowhere near as complicated as the real one Goode Erica May 24 2015 John F Nash Jr Math Genius Defined by a Beautiful Mind Dies at 86 The New York Times John F Nash Jr and Louis Nirenberg share the Abel Prize Abel Prize March 25 2015 a b c d Nasar Sylvia November 13 1994 The Lost Years of a Nobel Laureate The New York Times Princeton New Jersey Retrieved May 6 2014 Oscar race scrutinizes movies based on true stories USA Today March 6 2002 Retrieved January 22 2008 Academy Award Winners USA Today March 25 2002 Retrieved August 30 2008 Yuhas Daisy Throughout History Defining Schizophrenia Has Remained A Challenge Timeline Scientific American Mind Retrieved March 2 2013 Nasar 1998 Chapter 1 a b c d e f g h i j Nash John F Jr 1995 John F Nash Jr Biographical In Frangsmyr Tore ed The Nobel Prizes 1994 Presentations Biographies amp Lectures Stockholm Nobel Foundation pp 275 279 ISBN 978 9185848249 Nash recommendation letter PDF p 23 Archived from the original PDF on June 7 2017 Retrieved June 5 2015 Kuhn Harold W Nasar Sylvia eds The Essential John Nash PDF Princeton University Press pp Introduction xi Retrieved April 17 2008 Nasar 1998 Chapter 2 Nasar 2002 pp xvi xix Milnor John 1998 John Nash and A Beautiful Mind PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 25 10 1329 1332 a b c 1999 Steele Prizes PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 46 4 457 462 April 1999 2012 Press Release National Cryptologic Museum Opens New Exhibit on Dr John Nash National Security Agency Retrieved July 30 2022 John Nash s Letter to the NSA Turing s Invisible Hand February 17 2012 Retrieved February 25 2012 Nash John F May 1950 Non Cooperative Games PDF PhD thesis Princeton University Archived from the original PDF on April 20 2015 Retrieved May 24 2015 Osborne Martin J 2004 An Introduction to Game Theory Oxford England Oxford University Press p 23 ISBN 0 19 512895 8 Nash 1951 Nash 1950a Nash 1950b Nash 1953 a b Nasar 1998 Chapter 15 Nash 1952a Nash 1952b a b Bochnak Jacek Coste Michel Roy Marie Francoise 1998 Real algebraic geometry Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete 3 Folge Vol 36 Translated and revised from 1987 French original ed Berlin Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 662 03718 8 ISBN 3 540 64663 9 MR 1659509 S2CID 118839789 Zbl 0912 14023 Shiota Masahiro 1987 Nash manifolds Lecture Notes in Mathematics Vol 1269 Berlin Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 BFb0078571 ISBN 3 540 18102 4 MR 0904479 Zbl 0629 58002 Artin M Mazur B 1965 On periodic points Annals of Mathematics Second Series 81 1 82 99 doi 10 2307 1970384 JSTOR 1970384 MR 0176482 Zbl 0127 13401 Gromov Mikhail 2003 On the entropy of holomorphic maps PDF L Enseignement Mathematique Revue Internationale 2e Serie 49 3 4 217 235 MR 2026895 Zbl 1080 37051 a b c d Nasar 1998 Chapter 20 a b c Gromov Misha 2016 Introduction John Nash theorems and ideas In Nash John Forbes Jr Rassias Michael Th eds Open problems in mathematics Springer Cham doi 10 1007 978 3 319 32162 2 ISBN 978 3 319 32160 8 MR 3470099 Nash 1954 Eliashberg Y Mishachev N 2002 Introduction to the h principle Graduate Studies in Mathematics Vol 48 Providence RI American Mathematical Society doi 10 1090 gsm 048 ISBN 0 8218 3227 1 MR 1909245 a b c Gromov Mikhael 1986 Partial differential relations Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete 3 Vol 9 Berlin Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 662 02267 2 ISBN 3 540 12177 3 MR 0864505 De Lellis Camillo Szekelyhidi Laszlo Jr 2013 Dissipative continuous Euler flows Inventiones Mathematicae 193 2 377 407 arXiv 1202 1751 Bibcode 2013InMat 193 377D doi 10 1007 s00222 012 0429 9 MR 3090182 S2CID 2693636 Isett Philip 2018 A proof of Onsager s conjecture Annals of Mathematics Second Series 188 3 871 963 doi 10 4007 annals 2018 188 3 4 MR 3866888 S2CID 119267892 Muller S Sverak V 2003 Convex integration for Lipschitz mappings and counterexamples to regularity Annals of Mathematics Second Series 157 3 715 742 doi 10 4007 annals 2003 157 715 MR 1983780 S2CID 55855605 Nash 1956 a b Hamilton Richard S 1982 The inverse function theorem of Nash and Moser Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society New Series 7 1 65 222 doi 10 1090 s0273 0979 1982 15004 2 MR 0656198 Zbl 0499 58003 Nash 1966 a b c Nasar 1998 Chapter 30 Nash 1957 Nash 1958 a b Davies E B 1989 Heat kernels and spectral theory Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics Vol 92 Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511566158 ISBN 0 521 36136 2 MR 0990239 Grigor yan Alexander 2009 Heat kernel and analysis on manifolds AMS IP Studies in Advanced Mathematics Vol 47 Providence RI American Mathematical Society doi 10 1090 amsip 047 ISBN 978 0 8218 4935 4 MR 2569498 Kigami Jun 2001 Analysis on fractals Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics Vol 143 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 79321 1 MR 1840042 Lieb Elliott H Loss Michael 2001 Analysis Graduate Studies in Mathematics Vol 14 Second edition of 1997 original ed Providence RI American Mathematical Society ISBN 0 8218 2783 9 MR 1817225 Gilbarg David Trudinger Neil S 2001 Elliptic partial differential equations of second order Classics in Mathematics Reprint of the second ed Berlin Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 642 61798 0 ISBN 3 540 41160 7 MR 1814364 Lieberman Gary M 1996 Second order parabolic differential equations River Edge NJ World Scientific Publishing Co Inc doi 10 1142 3302 ISBN 981 02 2883 X MR 1465184 Fabes E B Stroock D W 1986 A new proof of Moser s parabolic Harnack inequality using the old ideas of Nash Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis 96 4 327 338 Bibcode 1986ArRMA 96 327F doi 10 1007 BF00251802 MR 0855753 S2CID 189774501 Nasar 1998 Chapter 31 Barany Michael January 18 2018 The Fields Medal should return to its roots Nature 553 7688 271 273 Bibcode 2018Natur 553 271B doi 10 1038 d41586 018 00513 8 Nasar 2011 p 251 Sabbagh Karl 2003 Dr Riemann s Zeros London England Atlantic Books pp 87 88 ISBN 1 84354 100 9 Brown University Didactic Readings DSM IV Schizophrenia DSM IV TR 295 1 295 3 295 90 PDF Providence Rhode Island Brown University pp 1 11 Retrieved June 1 2015 a b Nasar 2011 p 32 O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F John Forbes Nash Jr MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews Ebert Roger 2002 Roger Ebert s Movie Yearbook 2003 Andrews McMeel Publishing ISBN 978 0 7407 2691 0 Retrieved July 10 2008 Greihsel Marika September 1 2004 John F Nash Jr Interview Nobel Foundation Retrieved November 3 2018 Nash John Forbes 2002 PBS Interview Medication PBS Nash John PBS Interview How does Recovery Happen 2002 Nash John PBS Interview Delusional Thinking 2002 Nash John PBS Interview The Downward Spiral 2002 Nash John PBS Interview Hearing voices 2002 Nash John PBS Interview Paths to Recovery 2002 Nash John John Nash My experience with mental illness PBS Interview 2002 Nasar 2002 p xiii The Work of John Nash in Game Theory PDF Nobel Seminar December 8 1994 Archived from the original PDF on August 10 2013 Retrieved May 29 2015 Neubauer David June 1 2007 John Nash and a Beautiful Mind on Strike Yahoo Health Archived from the original on April 21 2008 Nash 2002a Zuckerman Julia April 27 2005 Nobel winner Nash critiques economic theory The Brown Daily Herald By JULIA ZUCKERMAN Wednesday April 27 2005 Capua Patrizia March 19 2003 Napoli laurea a Nash il genio dei numeri in Italian la Repubblica it Nobel Laureate John Nash to Visit HK china org cn Retrieved January 7 2017 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved May 25 2021 List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society Retrieved February 24 2013 2015 Nash and Nirenberg abelprize no Retrieved August 2 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Goldstein Scott April 10 2005 Eleanor Stier 84 Brookline nurse had son with Nobel laureate mathematician John F Nash Jr Boston com News Sutherland John March 18 2002 Beautiful mind lousy character The Guardian March 18 2002 John Nash mathematician obituary The Telegraph May 24 2015 Archived from the original on January 11 2022 Retrieved August 29 2016 Nasar Sylvia March 25 2002 The sum of a man The Guardian Retrieved July 9 2012 Contrary to widespread references to Nash s numerous homosexual liaisons he was not gay While he had several emotionally intense relationships with other men when he was in his early 20s I never interviewed anyone who claimed much less provided evidence that Nash ever had sex with another man Nash was arrested in a police trap in a public lavatory in Santa Monica in 1954 at the height of the McCarthy hysteria The military think tank where he was a consultant stripped him of his top secret security clearance and fired him The charge indecent exposure was dropped Nasar 2011 Chapter 17 Bad Boys p 143 In this circle Nash learned to make a virtue of necessity styling himself self consciously as a free thinker He announced that he was an atheist a b Livio Susan K June 11 2017 Son of A Beautiful Mind John Nash has one regret NJ Advance Media Retrieved June 17 2020 David Goodstein Mathematics to Madness and Back The New York Times June 11 1998 Cabbie In Crash That Killed John Nash Began Driving Taxi Two Weeks Ago A Beautiful Mind mathematician John Nash killed in cab crash Ma Myles May 23 2015 Famed A Beautiful Mind mathematician John Nash wife killed in taxi crash police say The Star Ledger Retrieved May 23 2015 Beautiful Mind mathematician John Nash killed in crash BBC News Retrieved May 24 2015 John Forbes Nash May Lose N J Home Associated Press March 14 2002 Archived from the original on May 18 2013 Retrieved February 22 2011 via HighBeam Research West Windsor N J John Forbes Nash Jr whose life is chronicled in the Oscar nominated movie A Beautiful Mind could lose his home if the township picks one of its proposals to replace a nearby bridge Goode Erica May 24 2015 John F Nash Jr Math Genius Defined by a Beautiful Mind Dies at 86 The New York Times Retrieved May 24 2015 The Wisdom of a Beautiful Mind The New York Times May 24 2015 Retrieved May 25 2015 Kwon Ha Kyung December 10 2010 Nash GS 50 The Phantom of Fine Hall The Daily Princetonian Archived from the original on May 6 2014 Retrieved May 6 2014 John F Nash Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences Retrieved October 10 2022 All prizes in economic sciences The Nobel Prize Retrieved October 10 2022 Fellows Alphabetical List Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences archived from the original on May 10 2019 retrieved October 9 2019 John F Nash Jr 2010 Honoree Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archived from the original on October 17 2014 Retrieved July 16 2014 Kelly Morgan March 26 2015 A long awaited recognition Nash receives Abel Prize for revered work in mathematics Office of Communications Princeton University Retrieved October 10 2022 Bibliography EditNasar Sylvia 1998 A Beautiful Mind New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4391 2649 3 Nasar Sylvia 2002 Introduction In Kuhn Harold W ed The Essential John Nash Princeton Princeton University Press pp xi xxv ISBN 978 0 691 09610 0 JSTOR j ctt1c3gwz0 Siegfried Tom 2006 A Beautiful Math Washington D C Joseph Henry Press ISBN 978 0 309 10192 9 O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F John Forbes Nash Jr MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St AndrewsExternal links EditJohn Forbes Nash Jr at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata Home Page of John F Nash Jr at Princeton John Forbes Nash Jr at the Mathematics Genealogy Project IDEAS RePEc Nash Equilibrium 2002 Slate article by Robert Wright about Nash s work and world government NSA releases Nash Encryption Machine plans to National Cryptologic Museum for public viewing 2012 John F Nash Jr 1928 2015 The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics Library of Economics and Liberty 2nd ed Liberty Fund 2016 Nash John 1928 2015 Rare Books and Special Collections from Princeton s Mudd Library including a copy of his dissertation PDF Biography of John Forbes Nash Jr from the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences John Forbes Nash Jr on Nobelprize org AwardsPreceded byRobert W FogelDouglass C North Laureate of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics1994 Served alongside John C Harsanyi Reinhard Selten Succeeded byRobert E Lucas Jr Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Forbes Nash Jr amp oldid 1132194127, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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