Florentin Smarandache

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Florentin Smarandache (born December 10, 1954) is a Romanian-American writer and associate professor of mathematics and science at the University of New Mexico, Gallup, New Mexico.

Smarandache was born in Bălceşti, in the Romanian county of Vâlcea. According to autobiographical writings he has provided on various websites, in 1986 he was refused an exit visa by the Ceauşescu regime that would have allowed him to attend the ICM held in Berkeley, California; in 1988 he fled from Romania leaving behind his son and pregnant wife; in 1990 after two years in refugee camps in Turkey, he emigrated to the United States. He was employed as a software engineer at Honeywell's facility in Phoenix, Arizona from 1990 to 1995 and was an adjunct professor at Pima Community College in Tucson from 1995 to 1997. He obtained a doctorate in mathematics from the State University of Chişinău, Moldova, in 1997 ([1], [2]). From 1997 to 2003 he was assistant professor at the University of New Mexico, Gallup branch [3]. In 2003 he was promoted to associate professor at this institution.

Contents

Writings

Smarandache has published material classified diversely as poems, translations, novels, dramas and fiction in Romanian, French, and English. His literary and philosophical writings are described by him as paradoxical; indeed, Smarandache describes himself as a "leader of paradoxism". He claims to have invented a new approach to dialectics he calls neutrosophy. For instance, neutrosophic sets appear to be a generalization of fuzzy sets, in which a third possibility between membership and non-membership in a set (indeterminateness) is allowed.

In mathematics, he has written material under the rubric of number theory and statistics. Among these is a book listing new and unsolved problems in number theory, most of them about sequences he defined. A typical example is the sequence 1, 11, 112, 1123, 11235, ... with the n-th entry obtained by concatenating the base ten digit expansions of the first n Fibonacci numbers. He is sometimes credited with having introduced the so-called "Smarandache function" S(n), defined as the smallest number such that n divides S(n)!. However, this function had already been studied by E. Lucas and J. Neuberg in the 1880s and by A. Kempner in 1918.

As of November 27, 2004 Bowker's Books in Print [4] listed 134 published titles in under the name Florentin Smarandache. Of these all but three of them are now published by Books on Demand and by American Research Press, a publisher which gives as contact its address in Reheboth, New Mexico. Of the remaining three, two were published by Zayu Press and one by Bristol Banner Books. Smarandache's books have been published at other times by other publishers.

The Smarandache Notions Journal (formerly known as Smarandache Functions Journal) is also published by American Research Press. The Smarandache Functions Journal and the American Research Press both give as their web page the home page of Smarandache at the University of New Mexico, Gallup.

Followers

A number of individuals have written papers on Smarandache notions such as Minh Perez (American Research Press) and Charles T. Le (who gives his affiliation as University of Arizona, Tempe).

Charles Ashbacher, currently president of Charles Ashbacher Technologies, an author on object-oriented technology [5] and a member of the adjunct faculty of Mount Mercy College [6] has written various articles on "Smarandache problems" in the Journal of Recreational Mathematics of which he is also editor ([7], [8]). The Journal of Recreational Mathematics is published by Baywood Publishing Company of Amityville, NY, and is primarily devoted to mathematical games and puzzles for grades 9 — 12. One such book, Pluckings from the Tree of Smarandache Sequences and Functions (American Research Press, 1998) was reviewed by the Mathematical Association of America [9]. According to the reviewer, in the book "There are a few theorems, but mostly there are questions, conjectures, and examples. Most of the mysteries being studied remain mysterious."

Outer-Art

Outer-Art is a term coined by Smarandache in the 1990s. He proposed creating the least artistic thing and calling it artwork. According to his manifesto:

The Outer-Art movement means to make art as ugly as possible, as wrong as possible, or as bad as possible... and, generally speaking, as impossible as possible!

Other contributions

Smarandache defined a type of geometrical structure which some have called called "Smarandache geometries". Smarandache geometries are non-Euclidean, and sometimes partially Euclidean and partially non-Euclidean, geometries. They have at least one axiom which behaves in at least two different ways within the same space (validated and invalided, or only invalidated but in multiple distinct ways).

Howard Iseri constructed a model on a 2D-manifold for a particular such geometry, where Euclid's fifth postulate is replaced by various statements within the same geometric space.

See also

External links



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