Gabriel Stolzenberg (Brooklyn, 1937 - Watertown, Massachusetts, 2019) was an American mathematician who taught at various academic institutions.
Early years and education
Stolzenberg was born in Brooklyn, New York to Aba Stolzenberg (1905-1966),[1] a Yiddish poet, and Bluma aka Florence Stolzenberg.[2] His father, Aba, and other Yiddish artists would often gather around poet Zishe Landau.[3] His elder sister, Ethel, participated in a social club created in 1938 by young Jewish girls in Crown Heights, called Faithful Friends Forever Club. She went on to receive a Ph.D. in Biophysics from Yale University, while, later, she and her husband, Irwin Tessman, were members of the biological sciences faculty at Purdue.[4]
He was an active participant in the so-called "science wars",[n 1][8][9][10] defending post-modernism and constructivism against the positions held by scientists and philosophers, as well as against accusations of relativism.[11] Solzenberg engaged publicly and for many years in a dialogue with opponents of the postmodernist approach to sciences and of the use of concepts of physics, mathematics, or chemistry in philosophy and the social sciences,[12][13] attracting commentary across both positive and social sciences[14] and drawing wider attention to these issues.[15]
Stolzenberg, Gabriel (1980). "Can an Inquiry into the Foundations of Mathematics Tell Us Anything Interesting about Mind?". In Watzlawick, Paul (ed.). The Invented Reality: How Do We Know What We Believe We Know?. W. W. Norton .
Private life
Stolzenberg married Judith Levine (b. 1938)[16] soon after graduating from Columbia in 1958.[5] He met his second wife, mathematician Nancy Kopell (b.1942), while they were both serving at the faculty of Boston University.[17] Stolzenberg and Levine had two children, Nomi and Daniel Stolzenberg.[5]
^S. Wiedenhof, Jeroen; Lubotsky, Alexander; Schaeken, Jos (2009). Evidence and Counter-evidence - Essays in Honour of Frederik Kortlandt: General Linguistics. Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics. Brill Publishers. p. 416. ISBN978-9042024717. Broad obstructive effects of language on progress in science have been intimated by Gabriel Solzenberg: despite a general awareness that language does seem to have the power to make us 'see things,' it is not taken seriously that language may be a determining influence and possibly a source of major error— for the contemporary scientist's own 'objective reality', the one into which he enters as a student and then shares with a community of fellow practitioners.