Peter Johnstone (mathematician)

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Peter Johnstone
A picture of Johnstone taken at Cambridge in 1978.
Johnstone in 1978
Born (1948-12-28) December 28, 1948 (age 75)
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge
Known forCategory theory
Topos theory
Logic
AwardsWhitehead Prize (1979)[1]
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
Thesis Some Aspects of Internal Category Theory in an Elementary Topos  (1974)
Doctoral advisorJohn Frank Adams

Peter Tennant Johnstone (born December 28, 1948) is Professor of the Foundations of Mathematics at the University of Cambridge, and a fellow of St. John's College.[2] He invented or developed a broad range of fundamental ideas in topos theory. His thesis, completed at the University of Cambridge in 1974, was entitled "Some Aspects of Internal Category Theory in an Elementary Topos".[3]

Peter Johnstone is a choral singer, having sung for over thirty years with the Cambridge University Musical Society and since 2004 with the (London) Bach Choir. Following a severe bout of COVID-19 in 2020, he was invited by the Bach Choir's musical director David Hill to provide the text for a new choral work about the pandemic which the Choir commissioned from the composer Richard Blackford; the piece, `Vision of a Garden', was performed at the Bach Choir's first post-lockdown concert in October 2021 in the Royal Festival Hall, london, and again in July 2023 in King's College Chapel, Cambridge[citation needed]

He is a great-great-great nephew of the Reverend George Gilfillan who was eulogised in William McGonagall's first poem.[4]

Books[edit]

  • Johnstone, Peter (1977), Topos Theory, Academic Press, ISBN 978-0-12-387850-2, Zbl 0368.18001.
— "[F]ar too hard to read, and not for the faint-hearted"[5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ The list of Whitehead Prize winners, retrieved 2019-10-10.
  2. ^ "Fellows of St. John's College 2009". Cambridge University Reporter. 2 October 2009.
  3. ^ "The Mathematics Genealogy Project - Peter Johnstone".
  4. ^ Hunt, Chris, William McGonagall: Collected Poems, Birlinn, 2006, px
  5. ^ An anonymous referee, as quoted by Johnstone in his Sketches of an elephant, p. ix.

External links[edit]