
Plaque to Sir Harold Jeffreys,
Newcastle University
Sir Harold Jeffreys,
FRS (
22
April 1891 –
18
March 1989) was a mathematician,
statistician, geophysicist, and astronomer. His seminal book
"Theory of probability", which first appeared in 1939, played an
important role in the revival of the
Bayesian view of probability.
Biography
He was
born in Fatfield
, Washington
, County Durham,
England
. He studied at Armstrong College in Newcastle upon
Tyne
, then part of the University of Durham
, and with the University of London
External Programme. He then went to St John's
College, Cambridge
and became a fellow in 1914. At Cambridge
University
he taught mathematics,
then geophysics and finally became the
Plumian Professor of
Astronomy.
He married another mathematician and physicist,
Bertha Swirles (1903-1999), in 1940 and
together they wrote
Methods of Mathematical Physics.
One of his major contributions was on the
Bayesian approach to
probability (also see
Jeffreys prior), as well as the idea that the
Earth's
planetary core was liquid. He
was
knighted in 1953.
Jeffreys received the
Gold Medal of the
Royal Astronomical Society in 1937, the
Royal Society's
Copley
Medal in 1960, and the
Royal Statistical Society's
Guy Medal in Gold in 1962. In 1948,
Jeffreys received the Prix Charles Lagrange from the
Académie royale des Sciences, des
Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique.
From 1939 to 1952 he was established as Director of the
International Seismological Summary further known as
International Seismological
Centre.
Opposition to continental drift
Jeffreys was a strong opponent of
continental drift. For him, continental
drift was "out of the question" because no force even remotely
strong enough to move the continents across the Earth's surface was
evident.
See also
Notes
- ET. Jaynes. Probability Theory: The Logic of Science
Cambridge University Press, (2003). ISBN 0-521-59271-2
-
http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/vetlesen/recipients/1962/jeffreys_bio.html
Medals
- Fellow, Royal Society, 1925
- Adams Prize, 1927 (Constitution of the Earth)
- Gold Medal, Royal Astronomical Society, 1937
- Buchan Prize, Royal Meteorological Society, 1929
- Murchison Medal of Geological Society (Great Britain) 1939
- Victoria Medal, Royal Geographical Society, 1941
- LaGrange Prize, Brussels Academy, 1948
- Royal Medal, 1948
- William Bowie Medal, American Geophysical Union, 1952
- Knighted, 1953
- Copley Medal, Royal Society, 1961
References
- David Howie, "Interpreting Probability: Controversies and
Developments in the Early Twentieth Century" (Cambridge University
Press, 2002)
- Maria Carla Galavotti. "Harold Jeffreys' Probabilistic
Epistemology: Between Logicism And Subjectivism". British
Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 54(1):43-57 (March
2003). (A review of Jeffreys' approach to probability; includes
remarks on R.A. Fisher, Frank
P. Ramsey, and Bruno de Finetti. Also online:
[79868])
- Bertha Swirles, Reminiscences and Discoveries: Harold
Jeffreys from 1891 to 1940, Notes and Records of the Royal
Society of London, Vol. 46, No. 2, pp. 301–308
(1992). [79869]
External links