Saunders mclane autobiography of miss

          This brief biography is based mostly on Mac Lane's own A mathematical autobiography [6], a manuscript “mostly completed” by Saunders himself.

        1. This brief biography is based mostly on Mac Lane's own A mathematical autobiography [6], a manuscript “mostly completed” by Saunders himself.
        2. An insightful, heartfelt autobiography on famous mathematician, Saunders Mac Lane.
        3. Saunders Mac Lane has been my teacher, mentor, and model almost from the beginning of my mathematical life.
        4. This brief biography is based mostly on Mac Lane's own A mathematical autobiography [], a manuscript.
        5. PDF | On Oct 1, , Colin McLarty published Saunders Mac Lane (): His Mathematical Life and Philosophical Works | Find, read and.
        6. Saunders Mac Lane has been my teacher, mentor, and model almost from the beginning of my mathematical life....

          Saunders Mac Lane

          American mathematician (1909–2005)

          Saunders Mac Lane (August 4, 1909 – April 14, 2005), born Leslie Saunders MacLane, was an American mathematician who co-founded category theory with Samuel Eilenberg.

          Early life and education

          Mac Lane was born in Norwich, Connecticut, near where his family lived in Taftville.[4] He was christened "Leslie Saunders MacLane", but "Leslie" fell into disuse because his parents, Donald MacLane and Winifred Saunders, came to dislike it.

          He began inserting a space into his surname because his first wife found it difficult to type the name without a space.[5] He was the eldest of three brothers; one of his brothers, Gerald MacLane, also became a mathematics professor at Rice University and Purdue University.

          Another sister died as a baby. His father and grandfather were both ministers; his grandfather had been a Presbyterian, but was kicked out of the church for believing in evolution, and his father was a