Georges Glaeser

Georges Glaeser ( 1918–2002 ) was a French mathematician who was director of the IREM of Strasbourg. He worked in analysis and mathematical education and introduced Glaeser's composition theorem and Glaeser's continuity theorem.

Glaeser was a Ph.D. student of Laurent Schwartz.[1]

On July 3, 1973, Glaeser filed a complaint against Vichy collaborator Paul Touvier in the Lyon Court, charging him with crimes against humanity. Glaeser accused Touvier of the 1944 massacre at Rillieux-la-Pape, in which Glaeser's father was murdered. Touvier was eventually imprisoned for life on this charge in 1994.

Selected publications

  • Glaeser, Georges (1963), "Fonctions composées différentiables", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 77 (1): 193–209, doi:10.2307/1970204, JSTOR 1970204, MR 0143058
  • "Etude de quelques algebres tayloriennes"
  • "Racine carrée d'une fonction différentiable", Annales de l'Institut Fourier 13, no. 2 (1963), 203–210
  • "Une introduction à la didactique expérimentale des mathématiques"
gollark: What seems to actually be desired is to mandate backdoors in all the popular end to end encrypted chat things, which *is* probably possible, but which would be very bad.
gollark: I entirely disagree with this, not least because cryptography is basically everywhere now so they can't stop people end-to-end-encrypting things themselves.
gollark: Generally it goes something along the lines of "end-to-end encryption bad, because we can't spy on it, which we totally need to do because something something terrorism children".
gollark: It gets brought up periodically, or whenever anything bad happens.
gollark: I especially "like" how they constantly complain about good encryption because something something terrorism something something children.

References


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