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John Horton Conway

John Horton Conway FRS (26 December 1937 – 11 April 2020) was an English mathematician active in the theory of finite groups, knot theory, number theory, combinatorial game theory and coding theory. He also made contributions to many branches of recreational mathematics, most notably the invention of the cellular automaton called the Game of Life.

John Horton Conway

Conway in June 2005
Born(1937-12-26)26 December 1937
Liverpool, England
Died11 April 2020(2020-04-11) (aged 82)
EducationGonville and Caius College, Cambridge (BA, MA, PhD)
Known for
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Cambridge
Princeton University
ThesisHomogeneous ordered sets (1964)
Doctoral advisorHarold Davenport[1]
Doctoral students
Website

Born and raised in Liverpool, Conway spent the first half of his career at the University of Cambridge before moving to the United States, where he held the John von Neumann Professorship at Princeton University for the rest of his career.[2][3][4][5][6][7] On 11 April 2020, at age 82, he died of complications from COVID-19.[8]

Early life and education

Conway was born on 26 December 1937 in Liverpool, the son of Cyril Horton Conway and Agnes Boyce.[7][9] He became interested in mathematics at a very early age. By the time he was 11, his ambition was to become a mathematician.[10][11] After leaving sixth form, he studied mathematics at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.[9] A "terribly introverted adolescent" in school, he took his admission to Cambridge as an opportunity to transform himself into an extrovert, a change which would later earn him the nickname of "the world's most charismatic mathematician".[12][13]

Conway was awarded a BA in 1959 and, supervised by Harold Davenport, began to undertake research in number theory. Having solved the open problem posed by Davenport on writing numbers as the sums of fifth powers, Conway began to become interested in infinite ordinals.[11] It appears that his interest in games began during his years studying the Cambridge Mathematical Tripos, where he became an avid backgammon player, spending hours playing the game in the common room.[7]

In 1964, Conway was awarded his doctorate and was appointed as College Fellow and Lecturer in Mathematics at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge.[14]

After leaving Cambridge in 1986, he took up the appointment to the John von Neumann Chair of Mathematics at Princeton University.[14] There, he won the school's Pi Day pie-eating contest.[15]

Conway and Martin Gardner

Conway's career was intertwined with that of Martin Gardner. When Gardner featured Conway's Game of Life in his Mathematical Games column in October 1970, it became the most widely read of all his columns and made Conway an instant celebrity.[16][17] Gardner and Conway had first corresponded in the late 1950s, and over the years Gardner had frequently written about recreational aspects of Conway's work.[18] For instance, he discussed Conway's game of Sprouts (July 1967), Hackenbush (January 1972), and his angel and devil problem (February 1974). In the September 1976 column, he reviewed Conway's book On Numbers and Games and even managed to explain Conway's surreal numbers.[19]

Conway was a prominent member of Martin Gardner's Mathematical Grapevine. He regularly visited Gardner and often wrote him long letters summarizing his recreational research. In a 1976 visit, Gardner kept him for a week, pumping him for information on the Penrose tilings which had just been announced. Conway had discovered many (if not most) of the major properties of the tilings.[20] Gardner used these results when he introduced the world to Penrose tiles in his January 1977 column.[21] The cover of that issue of Scientific American features the Penrose tiles and is based on a sketch by Conway.[17]

Personal life and death

Conway was married three times. With his first two wives he had two sons and four daughters.[citation needed] He married Diana in 2001 and had another son in 2001.[citation needed] He had three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.[7]

On 8 April 2020, Conway developed symptoms of COVID-19.[22] On 11 April, he died in New Brunswick, New Jersey, at the age of 82.[22][23][24][25][26]

Major areas of research

Recreational mathematics

 

Conway invented the Game of Life, one of the early examples of a cellular automaton. His initial experiments in that field were done with pen and paper, long before personal computers existed. Since Conway's game was popularized by Martin Gardner in Scientific American in 1970,[27] it has spawned hundreds of computer programs, web sites, and articles.[28] It is a staple of recreational mathematics. There is an extensive wiki devoted to curating and cataloging the various aspects of the game.[29] From the earliest days, it has been a favorite in computer labs, both for its theoretical interest and as a practical exercise in programming and data display. Conway came to dislike the Game of Life, feeling that it overshadowed deeper and more important things he had done.[30] Nevertheless, the game helped to launch a new branch of mathematics, the field of cellular automata.[31] The Game of Life is known to be Turing complete.[32][33]

Combinatorial game theory

Conway contributed to combinatorial game theory (CGT), a theory of partisan games. He developed the theory with Elwyn Berlekamp and Richard Guy, and also co-authored the book Winning Ways for your Mathematical Plays with them. He also wrote On Numbers and Games (ONAG) which lays out the mathematical foundations of CGT.

He was also one of the inventors of the game sprouts, as well as philosopher's football. He developed detailed analyses of many other games and puzzles, such as the Soma cube, peg solitaire, and Conway's soldiers. He came up with the angel problem, which was solved in 2006.

He invented a new system of numbers, the surreal numbers, which are closely related to certain games and have been the subject of a mathematical novelette by Donald Knuth.[34] He also invented a nomenclature for exceedingly large numbers, the Conway chained arrow notation. Much of this is discussed in the 0th part of ONAG.

Geometry

In the mid-1960s with Michael Guy, Conway established that there are sixty-four convex uniform polychora excluding two infinite sets of prismatic forms. They discovered the grand antiprism in the process, the only non-Wythoffian uniform polychoron.[35] Conway has also suggested a system of notation dedicated to describing polyhedra called Conway polyhedron notation.

In the theory of tessellations, he devised the Conway criterion which is a fast way to identify many prototiles that tile the plane.[36]

He investigated lattices in higher dimensions and was the first to determine the symmetry group of the Leech lattice.

Geometric topology

In knot theory, Conway formulated a new variation of the Alexander polynomial and produced a new invariant now called the Conway polynomial.[37] After lying dormant for more than a decade, this concept became central to work in the 1980s on the novel knot polynomials.[38] Conway further developed tangle theory and invented a system of notation for tabulating knots, now known as Conway notation, while correcting a number of errors in the 19th-century knot tables and extending them to include all but four of the non-alternating primes with 11 crossings.[39] The Conway knot is named after him.

Conway's conjecture that, in any thrackle, the number of edges is at most equal to the number of vertices, is still open.

Group theory

He was the primary author of the ATLAS of Finite Groups giving properties of many finite simple groups. Working with his colleagues Robert Curtis and Simon P. Norton he constructed the first concrete representations of some of the sporadic groups. More specifically, he discovered three sporadic groups based on the symmetry of the Leech lattice, which have been designated the Conway groups.[40] This work made him a key player in the successful classification of the finite simple groups.

Based on a 1978 observation by mathematician John McKay, Conway and Norton formulated the complex of conjectures known as monstrous moonshine. This subject, named by Conway, relates the monster group with elliptic modular functions, thus bridging two previously distinct areas of mathematics—finite groups and complex function theory. Monstrous moonshine theory has now been revealed to also have deep connections to string theory.[41]

Conway introduced the Mathieu groupoid, an extension of the Mathieu group M12 to 13 points.

Number theory

As a graduate student, he proved one case of a conjecture by Edward Waring, that every integer could be written as the sum of 37 numbers each raised to the fifth power, though Chen Jingrun solved the problem independently before Conway's work could be published.[42]

Algebra

Conway wrote a textbook on Stephen Kleene's theory of state machines and published original work on algebraic structures, focusing particularly on quaternions and octonions.[43] Together with Neil Sloane, he invented the icosians.[44]

Analysis

He invented a base 13 function as a counterexample to the converse of the intermediate value theorem: the function takes on every real value in each interval on the real line, so it has a Darboux property but is not continuous.

Algorithmics

For calculating the day of the week, he invented the Doomsday algorithm. The algorithm is simple enough for anyone with basic arithmetic ability to do the calculations mentally. Conway could usually give the correct answer in under two seconds. To improve his speed, he practised his calendrical calculations on his computer, which was programmed to quiz him with random dates every time he logged on. One of his early books was on finite-state machines.

Theoretical physics

In 2004, Conway and Simon B. Kochen, another Princeton mathematician, proved the free will theorem, a version of the "no hidden variables" principle of quantum mechanics. It states that given certain conditions, if an experimenter can freely decide what quantities to measure in a particular experiment, then elementary particles must be free to choose their spins to make the measurements consistent with physical law. Conway said that "if experimenters have free will, then so do elementary particles."[45]

Awards and honours

Conway received the Berwick Prize (1971),[46] was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (1981),[47][48] became a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1992, was the first recipient of the Pólya Prize (LMS) (1987),[46] won the Nemmers Prize in Mathematics (1998) and received the Leroy P. Steele Prize for Mathematical Exposition (2000) of the American Mathematical Society. In 2001 he was awarded an honorary degree from the University of Liverpool,[49] and in 2014 one from Alexandru Ioan Cuza University.[50]

His FRS nomination, in 1981, reads:

A versatile mathematician who combines a deep combinatorial insight with algebraic virtuosity, particularly in the construction and manipulation of "off-beat" algebraic structures which illuminate a wide variety of problems in completely unexpected ways. He has made distinguished contributions to the theory of finite groups, to the theory of knots, to mathematical logic (both set theory and automata theory) and to the theory of games (as also to its practice).[47]

In 2017 Conway was given honorary membership of the British Mathematical Association.[51]

Conferences called Gathering 4 Gardner are held every two years to celebrate the legacy of Martin Gardner, and Conway himself was often a featured speaker at these events, discussing various aspects of recreational mathematics.[52][53]

Select publications

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e John Horton Conway at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. ^ Conway, J. H.; Hardin, R. H.; Sloane, N. J. A. (1996). "Packing Lines, Planes, etc.: Packings in Grassmannian Spaces". Experimental Mathematics. 5 (2): 139. arXiv:math/0208004. doi:10.1080/10586458.1996.10504585. S2CID 10895494.
  3. ^ Conway, J. H.; Sloane, N. J. A. (1990). "A new upper bound on the minimal distance of self-dual codes". IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 36 (6): 1319. doi:10.1109/18.59931.
  4. ^ Conway, J. H.; Sloane, N. J. A. (1993). "Self-dual codes over the integers modulo 4". Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A. 62: 30–45. doi:10.1016/0097-3165(93)90070-O.
  5. ^ Conway, J.; Sloane, N. (1982). "Fast quantizing and decoding and algorithms for lattice quantizers and codes" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 28 (2): 227. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.392.249. doi:10.1109/TIT.1982.1056484.
  6. ^ Conway, J. H.; Lagarias, J. C. (1990). "Tiling with polyominoes and combinatorial group theory". Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A. 53 (2): 183. doi:10.1016/0097-3165(90)90057-4.
  7. ^ a b c d J J O'Connor and E F Robertson (2004). "John Conway – Biography". MacTutor History of Mathematics. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  8. ^ "COVID-19 Kills Renowned Princeton Mathematician, 'Game Of Life' Inventor John Conway In 3 Days". Mercer Daily Voice. 12 April 2020. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  9. ^ a b "CONWAY, Prof. John Horton". Who's Who 2014, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2014; online edn, Oxford University Press.(subscription required)
  10. ^ "John Horton Conway". Dean of the Faculty, Princeton University.
  11. ^ a b Mathematical Frontiers. Infobase Publishing. 2006. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-7910-9719-9.
  12. ^ Roberts, Siobhan (23 July 2015). "John Horton Conway: the world's most charismatic mathematician". The Guardian.
  13. ^ Mark Ronan (18 May 2006). Symmetry and the Monster: One of the greatest quests of mathematics. Oxford University Press, UK. pp. 163. ISBN 978-0-19-157938-7.
  14. ^ a b Sooyoung Chang (2011). Academic Genealogy of Mathematicians. World Scientific. p. 205. ISBN 978-981-4282-29-1.
  15. ^ "This Is How the Number 3.14 Got the Name 'Pi'". Time. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  16. ^ Mulcahy, Colm (21 October 2014) Martin Gardner, puzzle master extraordinaire, BBC News Magazine: "The Game of Life appeared in Scientific American in 1970, and was by far the most successful of Gardner's columns, in terms of reader response."
  17. ^ a b Mulcahy, Colm (21 October 2014). "The Top 10 Martin Gardner Scientific American Articles". Scientific American.
  18. ^ The Math Factor Podcast Website John H. Conway reminisces on his long friendship and collaboration with Martin Gardner.
  19. ^ Gardner, Martin (1989) Penrose Tiles to Trapdoor Ciphers, W. H. Freeman & Co., ISBN 0-7167-1987-8, Chapter 4. A non-technical overview; reprint of the 1976 Scientific American article.
  20. ^ Jackson, Allyn (2005). "Interview with Martin Gardner" (PDF). Notices of the AMS. 52 (6): 602–611.
  21. ^ Roberts, Siobhan (28 August 2015). "A Life In Games: The Playful Genius of John Conway". Quanta Magazine.
  22. ^ a b Levine, Cecilia (12 April 2020). "COVID-19 Kills Renowned Princeton Mathematician, 'Game Of Life' Inventor John Conway In 3 Days". Mercer Daily Voice.
  23. ^ Zandonella, Catherine (14 April 2020). "Mathematician John Horton Conway, a 'magical genius' known for inventing the 'Game of Life,' dies at age 82". Princeton University. Retrieved 15 April 2020.
  24. ^ Van den Brandhof, Alex (12 April 2020). "Mathematician Conway was a playful genius and expert on symmetry". NRC Handelsblad (in Dutch). Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  25. ^ Roberts, Siobhan (15 April 2020). "John Horton Conway, a 'Magical Genius' in Math, Dies at 82". New York Times. Retrieved 17 April 2020.
  26. ^ Mulcahy, Colm (23 April 2020). "John Horton Conway obituary". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  27. ^ Gardner, Martin (October 1970). "Mathematical Games: The fantastic combinations of John Conway's new solitaire game "Life"" (PDF). Scientific American. Vol. 223. pp. 120–123. JSTOR 24927642.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 March 2017. Retrieved 11 January 2017.
  29. ^ "LifeWiki". www.conwaylife.com.
  30. ^ Does John Conway hate his Game of Life? (video). Youtube
  31. ^ MacTutor History: The game made Conway instantly famous, but it also opened up a whole new field of mathematical research, the field of cellular automata.
  32. ^ Rendell, Paul (July 2015). Turing Machine Universality of the Game of Life. Emergence, Complexity and Computation. Vol. 18. Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-19842-2. ISBN 978-3319198415.
  33. ^ Case, James (1 April 2014). "Martin Gardner's Mathematical Grapevine". SIAM NEWS. Book reviews of Gardner, Martin, 2013 Undiluted Hocus-Pocus: The Autobiography of Martin Gardner. Princeton University Press and Henle, Michael; Hopkins, Brian (edts.) 2012 Martin Gardner in the Twenty-First Century. MAA Publications.
  34. ^ Infinity Plus One, and Other Surreal Numbers by Polly Shulman, Discover Magazine, 1 December 1995
  35. ^ Conway, J. H. (1967). "Four-dimensional Archimedean polytopes". Proc. Colloquium on Convexity, Copenhagen. Kobenhavns Univ. Mat. Institut: 38–39.
  36. ^ Rhoads, Glenn C. (2005). "Planar tilings by polyominoes, polyhexes, and polyiamonds". Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics. 174 (2): 329–353. Bibcode:2005JCoAM.174..329R. doi:10.1016/j.cam.2004.05.002.
  37. ^ Conway Polynomial Wolfram MathWorld
  38. ^ Livingston, Charles (1993) Knot Theory. MAA Textbooks. ISBN 0883850273
  39. ^ Perko, Ken (1982). "Primality of certain knots" (PDF). Topology Proceedings. 7: 109–118.
  40. ^ Harris, Michael (2015). Review of Genius At Play: The Curious Mind of John Horton Conway. "Mathematics: The mercurial mathematician". Nature. 523 (7561): 406–7. Bibcode:2015Natur.523..406H. doi:10.1038/523406a.
  41. ^ Darling, David. Monstrous Moonshine conjecture. Encyclopedia of Science
  42. ^ Jorge Nuno Silva (September 2005). "Breakfast with John Horton Conway" (PDF). EMS Newsletter. 57: 32–34.
  43. ^ Conway, John; Smith, Derek A. (2005). "On quaternions and Octonions : their Geometry, Arithmetic, and Symmetry". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 42 (2): 229–243. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-05-01043-8. ISBN 1568811349.
  44. ^ Baez, John (2 October 1993). "This Week's Finds in Mathematical Physics (Week 20)".
  45. ^ Conway's Proof Of The Free Will Theorem 25 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine by Jasvir Nagra
  46. ^ a b "List of LMS prize winners | London Mathematical Society". www.lms.ac.uk.
  47. ^ a b "John Conway". The Royal Society. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
  48. ^ Curtis, Robert Turner (2022). "John Horton Conway. 26 December 1937—11 April 2020". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 72: 117–138. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2021.0034. S2CID 245355088.
  49. ^ Sturla, Anna (14 April 2020). "John H. Conway, a renowned mathematician who created one of the first computer games, dies of coronavirus complications". CNN. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  50. ^ "Doctor Honoris Causa for John Horton Conway". Alexandru Ioan Cuza University. 19 June 2014. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  51. ^ "Honorary Members". The Mathematical Association. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
  52. ^ Presentation Videos 9 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine from 2014 Gathering 4 Gardner
  53. ^ Bellos, Alex (2008). The science of fun. The Guardian, 30 May 2008
  54. ^ Conway, J. H.; Norton, S. P. (1 October 1979). "Monstrous Moonshine". Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society. 11 (3): 308–339. doi:10.1112/blms/11.3.308 – via academic.oup.com.
  55. ^ Guy, Richard K. (1989). "Review: Sphere packings, lattices and groups, by J. H. Conway and N. J. A. Sloane" (PDF). Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. New Series. 21 (1): 142–147. doi:10.1090/s0273-0979-1989-15795-9.

Sources

External links

  • John Horton Conway's publications indexed by the Scopus bibliographic database. (subscription required)
  • Conway, John (20 April 2009). "Proof of the Free Will Theorem" (Video). Archived Lectures.
  • John Conway. Videos. Numberphile. playlist on YouTube
    • Look-and-Say Numbers. Feat John Conway (2014) on YouTube
    • Inventing the Game of Life (2014) on YouTube
  • The Princeton Brick (2014) on YouTube Conway leading a tour of brickwork patterns in Princeton, lecturing on the ordinals and on sums of powers and the Bernoulli numbers
  • necrology by Keith Hartnett in Quanta Magazine, April 20, 2020

john, horton, conway, john, conway, redirects, here, other, uses, john, conway, disambiguation, december, 1937, april, 2020, english, mathematician, active, theory, finite, groups, knot, theory, number, theory, combinatorial, game, theory, coding, theory, also. John Conway redirects here For other uses see John Conway disambiguation John Horton Conway FRS 26 December 1937 11 April 2020 was an English mathematician active in the theory of finite groups knot theory number theory combinatorial game theory and coding theory He also made contributions to many branches of recreational mathematics most notably the invention of the cellular automaton called the Game of Life John Horton ConwayFRSConway in June 2005Born 1937 12 26 26 December 1937Liverpool EnglandDied11 April 2020 2020 04 11 aged 82 New Brunswick New Jersey U S EducationGonville and Caius College Cambridge BA MA PhD Known forATLAS of Finite Groups Conway chained arrow notation Conway criterion Conway groups Conway notation knot theory Conway polyhedron notation Conway s Game of Life Doomsday algorithm Free will theorem Icosians Look and say sequence Mathieu groupoid Monstrous moonshine Pinwheel tiling Surreal numbersAwardsBerwick Prize 1971 Fellow of the Royal Society 1981 Polya Prize 1987 Nemmers Prize in Mathematics 1998 Leroy P Steele Prize 2000 Scientific careerFieldsMathematicsInstitutionsUniversity of CambridgePrinceton UniversityThesisHomogeneous ordered sets 1964 Doctoral advisorHarold Davenport 1 Doctoral studentsRichard Borcherds 1 Adrian Mathias 1 Simon Norton 1 Robert Wilson 1 WebsiteArchived version web archive orgBorn and raised in Liverpool Conway spent the first half of his career at the University of Cambridge before moving to the United States where he held the John von Neumann Professorship at Princeton University for the rest of his career 2 3 4 5 6 7 On 11 April 2020 at age 82 he died of complications from COVID 19 8 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Conway and Martin Gardner 3 Personal life and death 4 Major areas of research 4 1 Recreational mathematics 4 2 Combinatorial game theory 4 3 Geometry 4 4 Geometric topology 4 5 Group theory 4 6 Number theory 4 7 Algebra 4 8 Analysis 4 9 Algorithmics 4 10 Theoretical physics 5 Awards and honours 6 Select publications 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksEarly life and education EditConway was born on 26 December 1937 in Liverpool the son of Cyril Horton Conway and Agnes Boyce 7 9 He became interested in mathematics at a very early age By the time he was 11 his ambition was to become a mathematician 10 11 After leaving sixth form he studied mathematics at Gonville and Caius College Cambridge 9 A terribly introverted adolescent in school he took his admission to Cambridge as an opportunity to transform himself into an extrovert a change which would later earn him the nickname of the world s most charismatic mathematician 12 13 Conway was awarded a BA in 1959 and supervised by Harold Davenport began to undertake research in number theory Having solved the open problem posed by Davenport on writing numbers as the sums of fifth powers Conway began to become interested in infinite ordinals 11 It appears that his interest in games began during his years studying the Cambridge Mathematical Tripos where he became an avid backgammon player spending hours playing the game in the common room 7 In 1964 Conway was awarded his doctorate and was appointed as College Fellow and Lecturer in Mathematics at Sidney Sussex College Cambridge 14 After leaving Cambridge in 1986 he took up the appointment to the John von Neumann Chair of Mathematics at Princeton University 14 There he won the school s Pi Day pie eating contest 15 Conway and Martin Gardner EditConway s career was intertwined with that of Martin Gardner When Gardner featured Conway s Game of Life in his Mathematical Games column in October 1970 it became the most widely read of all his columns and made Conway an instant celebrity 16 17 Gardner and Conway had first corresponded in the late 1950s and over the years Gardner had frequently written about recreational aspects of Conway s work 18 For instance he discussed Conway s game of Sprouts July 1967 Hackenbush January 1972 and his angel and devil problem February 1974 In the September 1976 column he reviewed Conway s book On Numbers and Games and even managed to explain Conway s surreal numbers 19 Conway was a prominent member of Martin Gardner s Mathematical Grapevine He regularly visited Gardner and often wrote him long letters summarizing his recreational research In a 1976 visit Gardner kept him for a week pumping him for information on the Penrose tilings which had just been announced Conway had discovered many if not most of the major properties of the tilings 20 Gardner used these results when he introduced the world to Penrose tiles in his January 1977 column 21 The cover of that issue of Scientific American features the Penrose tiles and is based on a sketch by Conway 17 Personal life and death EditConway was married three times With his first two wives he had two sons and four daughters citation needed He married Diana in 2001 and had another son in 2001 citation needed He had three grandchildren and two great grandchildren 7 On 8 April 2020 Conway developed symptoms of COVID 19 22 On 11 April he died in New Brunswick New Jersey at the age of 82 22 23 24 25 26 Major areas of research EditRecreational mathematics Edit Main article Conway s Game of Life A single Gosper s Glider Gun creating gliders in Conway s Game of Life Conway invented the Game of Life one of the early examples of a cellular automaton His initial experiments in that field were done with pen and paper long before personal computers existed Since Conway s game was popularized by Martin Gardner in Scientific American in 1970 27 it has spawned hundreds of computer programs web sites and articles 28 It is a staple of recreational mathematics There is an extensive wiki devoted to curating and cataloging the various aspects of the game 29 From the earliest days it has been a favorite in computer labs both for its theoretical interest and as a practical exercise in programming and data display Conway came to dislike the Game of Life feeling that it overshadowed deeper and more important things he had done 30 Nevertheless the game helped to launch a new branch of mathematics the field of cellular automata 31 The Game of Life is known to be Turing complete 32 33 Combinatorial game theory Edit Conway contributed to combinatorial game theory CGT a theory of partisan games He developed the theory with Elwyn Berlekamp and Richard Guy and also co authored the book Winning Ways for your Mathematical Plays with them He also wrote On Numbers and Games ONAG which lays out the mathematical foundations of CGT He was also one of the inventors of the game sprouts as well as philosopher s football He developed detailed analyses of many other games and puzzles such as the Soma cube peg solitaire and Conway s soldiers He came up with the angel problem which was solved in 2006 He invented a new system of numbers the surreal numbers which are closely related to certain games and have been the subject of a mathematical novelette by Donald Knuth 34 He also invented a nomenclature for exceedingly large numbers the Conway chained arrow notation Much of this is discussed in the 0th part of ONAG Geometry Edit In the mid 1960s with Michael Guy Conway established that there are sixty four convex uniform polychora excluding two infinite sets of prismatic forms They discovered the grand antiprism in the process the only non Wythoffian uniform polychoron 35 Conway has also suggested a system of notation dedicated to describing polyhedra called Conway polyhedron notation In the theory of tessellations he devised the Conway criterion which is a fast way to identify many prototiles that tile the plane 36 He investigated lattices in higher dimensions and was the first to determine the symmetry group of the Leech lattice Geometric topology Edit In knot theory Conway formulated a new variation of the Alexander polynomial and produced a new invariant now called the Conway polynomial 37 After lying dormant for more than a decade this concept became central to work in the 1980s on the novel knot polynomials 38 Conway further developed tangle theory and invented a system of notation for tabulating knots now known as Conway notation while correcting a number of errors in the 19th century knot tables and extending them to include all but four of the non alternating primes with 11 crossings 39 The Conway knot is named after him Conway s conjecture that in any thrackle the number of edges is at most equal to the number of vertices is still open Group theory Edit He was the primary author of the ATLAS of Finite Groups giving properties of many finite simple groups Working with his colleagues Robert Curtis and Simon P Norton he constructed the first concrete representations of some of the sporadic groups More specifically he discovered three sporadic groups based on the symmetry of the Leech lattice which have been designated the Conway groups 40 This work made him a key player in the successful classification of the finite simple groups Based on a 1978 observation by mathematician John McKay Conway and Norton formulated the complex of conjectures known as monstrous moonshine This subject named by Conway relates the monster group with elliptic modular functions thus bridging two previously distinct areas of mathematics finite groups and complex function theory Monstrous moonshine theory has now been revealed to also have deep connections to string theory 41 Conway introduced the Mathieu groupoid an extension of the Mathieu group M12 to 13 points Number theory Edit As a graduate student he proved one case of a conjecture by Edward Waring that every integer could be written as the sum of 37 numbers each raised to the fifth power though Chen Jingrun solved the problem independently before Conway s work could be published 42 Algebra Edit Conway wrote a textbook on Stephen Kleene s theory of state machines and published original work on algebraic structures focusing particularly on quaternions and octonions 43 Together with Neil Sloane he invented the icosians 44 Analysis Edit He invented a base 13 function as a counterexample to the converse of the intermediate value theorem the function takes on every real value in each interval on the real line so it has a Darboux property but is not continuous Algorithmics Edit For calculating the day of the week he invented the Doomsday algorithm The algorithm is simple enough for anyone with basic arithmetic ability to do the calculations mentally Conway could usually give the correct answer in under two seconds To improve his speed he practised his calendrical calculations on his computer which was programmed to quiz him with random dates every time he logged on One of his early books was on finite state machines Theoretical physics Edit In 2004 Conway and Simon B Kochen another Princeton mathematician proved the free will theorem a version of the no hidden variables principle of quantum mechanics It states that given certain conditions if an experimenter can freely decide what quantities to measure in a particular experiment then elementary particles must be free to choose their spins to make the measurements consistent with physical law Conway said that if experimenters have free will then so do elementary particles 45 Awards and honours EditConway received the Berwick Prize 1971 46 was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society 1981 47 48 became a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1992 was the first recipient of the Polya Prize LMS 1987 46 won the Nemmers Prize in Mathematics 1998 and received the Leroy P Steele Prize for Mathematical Exposition 2000 of the American Mathematical Society In 2001 he was awarded an honorary degree from the University of Liverpool 49 and in 2014 one from Alexandru Ioan Cuza University 50 His FRS nomination in 1981 reads A versatile mathematician who combines a deep combinatorial insight with algebraic virtuosity particularly in the construction and manipulation of off beat algebraic structures which illuminate a wide variety of problems in completely unexpected ways He has made distinguished contributions to the theory of finite groups to the theory of knots to mathematical logic both set theory and automata theory and to the theory of games as also to its practice 47 In 2017 Conway was given honorary membership of the British Mathematical Association 51 Conferences called Gathering 4 Gardner are held every two years to celebrate the legacy of Martin Gardner and Conway himself was often a featured speaker at these events discussing various aspects of recreational mathematics 52 53 Select publications Edit Scholia has a profile for John Horton Conway Q268961 1971 Regular algebra and finite machines Chapman and Hall London 1971 Series Chapman and Hall mathematics series ISBN 0412106205 1976 On numbers and games Academic Press New York 1976 Series L M S monographs 6 ISBN 0121863506 1979 On the Distribution of Values of Angles Determined by Coplanar Points with Paul Erdos Michael Guy and H T Croft Journal of the London Mathematical Society vol II series 19 pp 137 143 1979 Monstrous Moonshine with Simon P Norton 54 Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society vol 11 issue 2 pp 308 339 1982 Winning Ways for your Mathematical Plays with Richard K Guy and Elwyn Berlekamp Academic Press ISBN 0120911507 1985 Atlas of finite groups with Robert Turner Curtis Simon Phillips Norton Richard A Parker and Robert Arnott Wilson Clarendon Press New York Oxford University Press 1985 ISBN 0198531990 1988 Sphere Packings Lattices and Groups 55 with Neil Sloane Springer Verlag New York Series Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften 290 ISBN 9780387966175 1995 Minimal Energy Clusters of Hard Spheres with Neil Sloane R H Hardin and Tom Duff Discrete amp Computational Geometry vol 14 no 3 pp 237 259 1996 The Book of Numbers with Richard K Guy Copernicus New York 1996 ISBN 0614971667 1997 The Sensual quadratic Form with Francis Yein Chei Fung Mathematical Association of America Washington DC 1997 Series Carus mathematical monographs no 26 ISBN 1614440255 2002 On Quaternions and Octonions with Derek A Smith A K Peters Natick MA 2002 ISBN 1568811349 2008 The Symmetries of Things with Heidi Burgiel and Chaim Goodman Strauss A K Peters Wellesley MA 2008 ISBN 1568812205 See also EditList of things named after John Horton ConwayReferences Edit a b c d e John Horton Conway at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Conway J H Hardin R H Sloane N J A 1996 Packing Lines Planes etc Packings in Grassmannian Spaces Experimental Mathematics 5 2 139 arXiv math 0208004 doi 10 1080 10586458 1996 10504585 S2CID 10895494 Conway J H Sloane N J A 1990 A new upper bound on the minimal distance of self dual codes IEEE Transactions on Information Theory 36 6 1319 doi 10 1109 18 59931 Conway J H Sloane N J A 1993 Self dual codes over the integers modulo 4 Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series A 62 30 45 doi 10 1016 0097 3165 93 90070 O Conway J Sloane N 1982 Fast quantizing and decoding and algorithms for lattice quantizers and codes PDF IEEE Transactions on Information Theory 28 2 227 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 392 249 doi 10 1109 TIT 1982 1056484 Conway J H Lagarias J C 1990 Tiling with polyominoes and combinatorial group theory Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series A 53 2 183 doi 10 1016 0097 3165 90 90057 4 a b c d J J O Connor and E F Robertson 2004 John Conway Biography MacTutor History of Mathematics Retrieved 24 May 2022 COVID 19 Kills Renowned Princeton Mathematician Game Of Life Inventor John Conway In 3 Days Mercer Daily Voice 12 April 2020 Retrieved 25 November 2020 a b CONWAY Prof John Horton Who s Who 2014 A amp C Black an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc 2014 online edn Oxford University Press subscription required John Horton Conway Dean of the Faculty Princeton University a b Mathematical Frontiers Infobase Publishing 2006 p 38 ISBN 978 0 7910 9719 9 Roberts Siobhan 23 July 2015 John Horton Conway the world s most charismatic mathematician The Guardian Mark Ronan 18 May 2006 Symmetry and the Monster One of the greatest quests of mathematics Oxford University Press UK pp 163 ISBN 978 0 19 157938 7 a b Sooyoung Chang 2011 Academic Genealogy of Mathematicians World Scientific p 205 ISBN 978 981 4282 29 1 This Is How the Number 3 14 Got the Name Pi Time Retrieved 21 September 2022 Mulcahy Colm 21 October 2014 Martin Gardner puzzle master extraordinaire BBC News Magazine The Game of Life appeared in Scientific American in 1970 and was by far the most successful of Gardner s columns in terms of reader response a b Mulcahy Colm 21 October 2014 The Top 10 Martin Gardner Scientific American Articles Scientific American The Math Factor Podcast Website John H Conway reminisces on his long friendship and collaboration with Martin Gardner Gardner Martin 1989 Penrose Tiles to Trapdoor Ciphers W H Freeman amp Co ISBN 0 7167 1987 8 Chapter 4 A non technical overview reprint of the 1976 Scientific American article Jackson Allyn 2005 Interview with Martin Gardner PDF Notices of the AMS 52 6 602 611 Roberts Siobhan 28 August 2015 A Life In Games The Playful Genius of John Conway Quanta Magazine a b Levine Cecilia 12 April 2020 COVID 19 Kills Renowned Princeton Mathematician Game Of Life Inventor John Conway In 3 Days Mercer Daily Voice Zandonella Catherine 14 April 2020 Mathematician John Horton Conway a magical genius known for inventing the Game of Life dies at age 82 Princeton University Retrieved 15 April 2020 Van den Brandhof Alex 12 April 2020 Mathematician Conway was a playful genius and expert on symmetry NRC Handelsblad in Dutch Retrieved 12 April 2020 Roberts Siobhan 15 April 2020 John Horton Conway a Magical Genius in Math Dies at 82 New York Times Retrieved 17 April 2020 Mulcahy Colm 23 April 2020 John Horton Conway obituary The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Gardner Martin October 1970 Mathematical Games The fantastic combinations of John Conway s new solitaire game Life PDF Scientific American Vol 223 pp 120 123 JSTOR 24927642 DMOZ Conway s Game of Life Sites Archived from the original on 17 March 2017 Retrieved 11 January 2017 LifeWiki www conwaylife com Does John Conway hate his Game of Life video Youtube MacTutor History The game made Conway instantly famous but it also opened up a whole new field of mathematical research the field of cellular automata Rendell Paul July 2015 Turing Machine Universality of the Game of Life Emergence Complexity and Computation Vol 18 Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 319 19842 2 ISBN 978 3319198415 Case James 1 April 2014 Martin Gardner s Mathematical Grapevine SIAM NEWS Book reviews of Gardner Martin 2013 Undiluted Hocus Pocus The Autobiography of Martin Gardner Princeton University Press and Henle Michael Hopkins Brian edts 2012 Martin Gardner in the Twenty First Century MAA Publications Infinity Plus One and Other Surreal Numbers by Polly Shulman Discover Magazine 1 December 1995 Conway J H 1967 Four dimensional Archimedean polytopes Proc Colloquium on Convexity Copenhagen Kobenhavns Univ Mat Institut 38 39 Rhoads Glenn C 2005 Planar tilings by polyominoes polyhexes and polyiamonds Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics 174 2 329 353 Bibcode 2005JCoAM 174 329R doi 10 1016 j cam 2004 05 002 Conway Polynomial Wolfram MathWorld Livingston Charles 1993 Knot Theory MAA Textbooks ISBN 0883850273 Perko Ken 1982 Primality of certain knots PDF Topology Proceedings 7 109 118 Harris Michael 2015 Review of Genius At Play The Curious Mind of John Horton Conway Mathematics The mercurial mathematician Nature 523 7561 406 7 Bibcode 2015Natur 523 406H doi 10 1038 523406a Darling David Monstrous Moonshine conjecture Encyclopedia of Science Jorge Nuno Silva September 2005 Breakfast with John Horton Conway PDF EMS Newsletter 57 32 34 Conway John Smith Derek A 2005 On quaternions and Octonions their Geometry Arithmetic and Symmetry Bull Amer Math Soc 42 2 229 243 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 05 01043 8 ISBN 1568811349 Baez John 2 October 1993 This Week s Finds in Mathematical Physics Week 20 Conway s Proof Of The Free Will Theorem Archived 25 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine by Jasvir Nagra a b List of LMS prize winners London Mathematical Society www lms ac uk a b John Conway The Royal Society Retrieved 11 April 2020 Curtis Robert Turner 2022 John Horton Conway 26 December 1937 11 April 2020 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 72 117 138 doi 10 1098 rsbm 2021 0034 S2CID 245355088 Sturla Anna 14 April 2020 John H Conway a renowned mathematician who created one of the first computer games dies of coronavirus complications CNN Retrieved 16 April 2020 Doctor Honoris Causa for John Horton Conway Alexandru Ioan Cuza University 19 June 2014 Retrieved 7 July 2020 Honorary Members The Mathematical Association Retrieved 11 April 2020 Presentation Videos Archived 9 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine from 2014 Gathering 4 Gardner Bellos Alex 2008 The science of fun The Guardian 30 May 2008 Conway J H Norton S P 1 October 1979 Monstrous Moonshine Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 11 3 308 339 doi 10 1112 blms 11 3 308 via academic oup com Guy Richard K 1989 Review Sphere packings lattices and groups by J H Conway and N J A Sloane PDF Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society New Series 21 1 142 147 doi 10 1090 s0273 0979 1989 15795 9 Sources EditAlpert Mark 1999 Not Just Fun and Games Scientific American April 1999 Boden Margaret 2006 Mind As Machine Oxford University Press 2006 p 1271 du Sautoy Marcus 2008 Symmetry HarperCollins p 308 Guy Richard K 1983 Conway s Prime Producing Machine Mathematics Magazine Vol 56 No 1 Jan 1983 pp 26 33 Roberts Siobhan 2015 Genius at play The curious mind of John Horton Conway Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1620405932 O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F John Horton Conway MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews John Horton Conway at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Princeton University 2009 Bibliography of John H Conway Mathematics Department Seife Charles 1994 Impressions of Conway The Sciences Schleicher Dierk 2011 Interview with John Conway Notices of the AMSExternal links EditJohn Horton Conway at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote John Horton Conway s publications indexed by the Scopus bibliographic database subscription required Conway John 20 April 2009 Proof of the Free Will Theorem Video Archived Lectures John Conway Videos Numberphile playlist on YouTube Look and Say Numbers Feat John Conway 2014 on YouTube Inventing the Game of Life 2014 on YouTube The Princeton Brick 2014 on YouTube Conway leading a tour of brickwork patterns in Princeton lecturing on the ordinals and on sums of powers and the Bernoulli numbers necrology by Keith Hartnett in Quanta Magazine April 20 2020Portals Biography Mathematics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Horton Conway amp oldid 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