Frank Bonsall

Frank Featherstone Bonsall FRS (31 March 1920, Crouch End, London – 22 February 2011, Harrogate) was a British mathematician.[1]

Life

Bonsall was born on 31 March 1920, the youngest son of Wilfred C Bonsall and Sarah Frank. His older brother was Arthur Bonsall.[2] He graduated from Bishop's Stortford College in 1938, and studied at Merton College, Oxford.[3] He served in World War II, in the Corps of Royal Engineers, and in India from 1944 to 1946.[4]

He married Gillian Patrick, in 1947.[3] He lectured at the University of Edinburgh from 1947 to 1948; was Visiting Associate Professor at Oklahoma State University from 1950 to 1951; taught at Newcastle University, with Werner Wolfgang Rogosinski in the 1950s; was visiting professor at Yale University; and taught at the University of Edinburgh, from 1963 to 1984.[5] In 1966, he was awarded the London Mathematical Society's Berwick Prize. Despite not himself having a PhD, Bonsall supervised many PhD candidates[6] who knew him affectionately as "FFB". After his retirement, Bonsall and his wife moved to Harrogate.

Bonsall and his wife were keen hill-walkers.[7] He wrote two articles for The Scottish Mountaineering Club on the definition of a Munro.

Works

gollark: Do you know more about that? I can't find any information on that easily.
gollark: So just take the image feature outputs and run them through a classifier thing?
gollark: Mine mostly don't share templates, actually, but that's a reasonable idea anyway. I'll look into it.
gollark: I wouldn't expect it to be able to understand hugely abstract things or whatever but just approximately match my tastes.
gollark: I want to make something to automatically classify memes as worth adding to my meme collection or not. I have several thousand already in there which are in it and so "good", and could probably crawl tons from Reddit which are probably "bad". Is this practical?

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.