Warsaw School of Mathematics
The Warsaw School of Mathematics describes a group of mathematicians working in logic, set theory, point-set topology and real analysis in the 1920s and 1930s. Their journal was Fundamenta Mathematicae (founded in 1920), one of the first specialized pure mathematics journals in the world. Here in 1933 Tarski published his celebrated theorem on the undefinability of the notion of truth.
Notable members of this school were:
- Wacław Sierpinski
- Kazimierz Kuratowski
- Edward Marczewski
- Bronisław Knaster
- Zygmunt Janiszewski
- Stefan Mazurkiewicz
- Stanisław Saks
- Karol Borsuk
- Roman Sikorski
- Nachman Aronszajn
- Samuel Eilenberg
The group of logicians in Warsaw (Lwów-Warsaw School of logic) also included:
Fourier analysis was developed in Warsaw by:
- Aleksander Rajchman
- Antoni Zygmund
- Józef Marcinkiewicz
- Otton M. Nikodym
- Jerzy Spława-Neyman
