Richard A. Shore | |
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Born | August 18, 1946 (age 70) |
Citizenship | United States |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | Cornell University |
Alma mater | MIT |
Thesis | Priority Arguments in Alpha-Recursion Theory |
Doctoral advisor | Gerald E. Sacks |
Richard Arnold Shore (born August 18, 1946) is a professor of mathematics at Cornell University who works in recursion theory. He is particularly known for his work on , the partial order of the Turing degrees.
He was in 1983 an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Warsaw and gave a talk The Degrees of Unsolvability: the Ordering of Functions by Relative Computability. In 2009 he was the Gödel Lecturer (Reverse mathematics: the playground of logic). He was an editor from 1984 to 1993 of the Journal of Symbolic Logic and from 1993 to 2000 of the Bulletin of Symbolic Logic. In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.