VI.38 Augustus De Morgan

b. Madura (now Madurai), India, 1806; d. London, 1871
Professor of Mathematics, University College London
(1828-31, 1836-66); first president of the
London Mathematical Society (1865-66)


De Morgan, a prolific author in many fields of mathematics and its history, made important and original contributions to the development of mathematical logic. He is particularly remembered for what we now call de Morgan’s laws, which he first published in 1858 in a paper in the Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. The “laws” can be stated (using the notation of sets) as follows. If A and B are subsets of a set X, then (A ∩ B)c = AC ∪ BC and (A ∪ B)C = AC ∩ BC, where “∪” represents union, “∩” represents intersection, and a superscript “c” denotes the complement with respect to X.

 

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