Émile Borel should not be confused with Armand Borel.
Émile Borel | |||||||||||||||||||
Office: | Minister of the Navy | ||||||||||||||||||
Term Start: | 17 April 1925 | ||||||||||||||||||
Term End: | 28 November 1925 | ||||||||||||||||||
Primeminister: | Paul Painlevé | ||||||||||||||||||
Predecessor: | Jacques-Louis Dumesnil | ||||||||||||||||||
Successor: | Georges Leygues | ||||||||||||||||||
Office1: | Member of the Chamber of Deputies | ||||||||||||||||||
Term Start1: | 15 June 1924 | ||||||||||||||||||
Term End1: | 4 June 1936 | ||||||||||||||||||
Birth Name: | Félix Édouard Justin Émile Borel | ||||||||||||||||||
Birth Date: | 7 January 1871 | ||||||||||||||||||
Birth Place: | Saint-Affrique, France | ||||||||||||||||||
Death Place: | Paris, France | ||||||||||||||||||
Nationality: | French
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Félix Édouard Justin Émile Borel (in French bɔʁɛl/; 7 January 1871 – 3 February 1956) was a French mathematician[1] and politician. As a mathematician, he was known for his founding work in the areas of measure theory and probability.
Borel was born in Saint-Affrique, Aveyron, the son of a Protestant pastor.[2] He studied at the Collège Sainte-Barbe and Lycée Louis-le-Grand before applying to both the École normale supérieure and the École Polytechnique. He qualified in the first position for both and chose to attend the former institution in 1889. That year he also won the concours général, an annual national mathematics competition. After graduating in 1892, he placed first in the agrégation, a competitive civil service examination leading to the position of professeur agrégé. His thesis, published in 1893, was titled Sur quelques points de la théorie des fonctions ("On some points in the theory of functions"). That year, Borel started a four-year stint as a lecturer at the University of Lille, during which time he published 22 research papers. He returned to the École normale supérieure in 1897, and was appointed to the chair of theory of functions, which he held until 1941.[3]
In 1901, Borel married 17-year-old Marguerite, the daughter of colleague Paul Émile Appel; she later wrote more than 30 novels under the pseudonym Camille Marbo. Émile Borel died in Paris on 3 February 1956.[3]
Along with René-Louis Baire and Henri Lebesgue, Émile Borel was among the pioneers of measure theory and its application to probability theory. The concept of a Borel set is named in his honor. One of his books on probability introduced the amusing thought experiment that entered popular culture under the name infinite monkey theorem or the like. He also published a series of papers (1921–1927) that first defined games of strategy.[4] John von Neumann objected to this assignment of priority in a letter to Econometrica published in 1953 where he asserted that Borel could not have defined games of strategy because he rejected the minimax theorem.[5]
With the development of statistical hypothesis testing in the early 1900s various tests for randomness were proposed. Sometimes these were claimed to have some kind of general significance, but mostly they were just viewed as simple practical methods. In 1909, Borel formulated the notion that numbers picked randomly on the basis of their value are almost always normal, and with explicit constructions in terms of digits, it is quite straightforward to get numbers that are normal.
In 1913 and 1914 he bridged the gap between hyperbolic geometry and special relativity with expository work. For instance, his book Introduction Géométrique à quelques Théories Physiques[6] described hyperbolic rotations as transformations that leave a hyperbola stable just as a circle around a rotational center is stable.
In 1922, he founded the Paris Institute of Statistics, the oldest French school for statistics; then in 1928 he co-founded the Institut Henri Poincaré in Paris.
In the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, he was active in politics. From 1924 to 1936, he was a member of the Chamber of Deputies.[7] In 1925, he was Minister of the Navy in the cabinet of fellow mathematician Paul Painlevé. During the Second World War, he was a member of the French Resistance.
Besides the Centre Émile Borel at the Institut Henri Poincaré in Parisand a crater on the Moon, the following mathematical notions are named after him:
Borel also described a poker model that he coins La Relance in his 1938 book Applications de la théorie des probabilités aux Jeux de Hasard.[8]
Borel was awarded the Resistance Medal in 1950.[3]