John Horton Conway. 26 December 1937—11 April 2020 release_pidhpkmqxvbtzh3a5hixqqnibq

by Robert Turner Curtis

Published in Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society by The Royal Society.

2021  

Abstract

<jats:inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="rsbm20210034f08.tif" /> John Conway was without doubt one of the most celebrated British mathematicians of the last half century. He first gained international recognition in 1968 when he constructed the automorphism group of the then recently-discovered Leech lattice, and in so doing discovered three new sporadic simple groups. At around the same time he invented The Game of Life, which brought him to the attention of a much wider audience and led to a cult following of Lifers. He also combined the methods of Cantor and Dedekind for extending number systems to construct what Donald Knuth (ForMemRS 2003) called 'surreal numbers', the achievement of which Conway was probably most proud. Throughout his life he continued to make significant contributions to many branches of mathematics, including number theory, logic, algebra, combinatorics and geometry, and in his later years he teamed up with Simon Kochen to produce the Free Will theorem, which asserts that if humans have free will then, in a certain sense, so do elementary particles. In this biographical memoir I attempt to give some idea of the depth and breadth of Conway's contribution to mathematics.
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