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Nicolas Rashevsky | |
|---|---|
| Born | November 9, 1899 Chernigov, Russian Empire (now Chernihiv, Ukraine) |
| Died | January 16, 1972 (aged 72) Holland, Michigan, United States |
| Alma mater | St. Vladimir Imperial University of Kiev, University of Chicago |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Theoretical physics, Mathematical biology |
| Institutions | University of Chicago, University of Michigan |
| Notable students | George Karreman, Robert Rosen, Clyde Coombs, Anatol Rapoport, Herbert A. Simon |
Nicolas Rashevsky (November 9, 1899 – January 16, 1972) was an American theoretical physicist who was one of the pioneers of mathematical biology, and is also considered the father of mathematical biophysics and theoretical biology.[1][2][3][4]
In USA he worked at first for the Westinghouse Research Labs in Pittsburgh where he focused on the theoretical physics modeling of the cell division and the mathematics of cell fission.
He was awarded a Rockefeller Fellowship in 1934 and went to the University of Chicago to take up the appointment of assistant professor in the department of physiology. In 1938, inspired by reading On Growth and Form (1917) by D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson, he made his first major contribution by publishing his first book on Mathematical Biophysics, and then in 1939 he also founded the first mathematical biology international journal entitled The Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics (BMB); these two essential contributions founded the field of mathematical biology, with the Bulletin of Mathematical Biology serving as the focus of contributing mathematical biologists over the last 70 years. During the late 1930s, Rashevsky's research group was producing papers that had difficulty publishing in other journals at the time, so Rashevsky decided to found a new journal exclusively devoted to mathematical biophysics. In January 1939, he approached the editor of the journal Psychometrika, L.L. Thurstone, and formed an agreement that the new journal, the BMB, would be published as a supplement to their quarterly issues.[5]
In 1938 he published one of the first books on mathematical biology and mathematical biophysics entitled: "Mathematical Biophysics: Physico-Mathematical Foundations of Biology." This fundamental book was eventually published in three revised editions, the last revision appearing in two volumes in 1960. It was followed in 1940 by "Advances and applications of mathematical biology.", and in 1947 by "Mathematical theory of human relations", an approach to a mathematical model of society. In the same year he established the World' s first{{citation needed|date=August 2013} ogy]] at the University of Chicago.
In the early 1930s, Rashevsky developed the first model of neural networks.[6][7][8] This was paraphrased in a Boolean context by his student Walter Pitts and Warren McCulloch in their 1943 paper "A Logical Calculus of the Ideas Immanent in Nervous Activity," published in Rashevsky's The Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics in 1943.[9] This paper subsequently became extremely influential for research on artificial intelligence and artificial neural networks.[10]
His later efforts focused on the topology of biological systems, the formulation of fundamental principles in biology, relational biology, set theory and propositional logic formulation of the hierarchical organization of organisms and human societies. In the second half of the 1960s, he introduced the concept of "organismic sets" that provided a unified framework for physics, biology and sociology. This was subsequently developed by other authors as organismic supercategories and Complex Systems Biology.
However, his more advanced ideas and abstract relational biology concepts found little support in the beginning amongst practicing experimental or molecular biologists,
In 1954 the budget for his Committee of Mathematical Biology was drastically cut; however, this was at least in part politically imposed, rather than scientifically, motivated. Thus, the subsequent University of Chicago administration—notably represented by the genetics Nobel laureate George Wells Beadle— who reversed in the 1960s the previous position and quadrupled the financial support for Rashevsky's Committee for Mathematical Biology research activities ("Reminiscences of Nicolas Rashevsky." by Robert Rosen, written in late 1972).
He was a tall man with a slight Eastern European accent and remained cognitively active until his death from coronary artery disease in 1972. His generosity has been noted by former associates and visitors. As Chief Editor of BMB, he had a policy of assisting authors with the presentation of their papers and providing suggestions on submissions.[11]
This article incorporates material from Nicolas Rashevsky on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. The article also incorporates additional data from planetphysics.org[Usurped!]; furthermore, both external entries are original, contributed objects in the public domain.