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Sofia Janovskaja : ウィキペディア英語版
Sofya Yanovskaya

Sofya Aleksandrovna Yanovskaya (also Janovskaja; (ロシア語:Софья Александровна Яновская); 31 January 1896 – 24 October 1966) was a mathematician and historian, specializing in the history of mathematics, mathematical logic, and philosophy of mathematics. She is best known for her efforts of restoring mathematical logic research in the Soviet Union and publishing and editing mathematical works of Karl Marx.
==Biography==
Yanovskaya was born in Pruzhany, a town near Brest, to a Jewish family of accountant ''Alexander Neimark''. From 1914 to 1918 she studied in a woman's college in Odessa, when she became a communist. She worked as a party official until 1924, when she started teaching at the Institute of Red Professoriate. With exception of the war years (1941–1943), she worked at Moscow State University until retirement.
She received her doctoral degree in 1935.
Her work on Karl Marx's mathematical manuscripts began in 1930s and may have had some influence on the study of non-standard analysis in China.〔J.W. Dauben, (''Marx, Mao and mathematics: the politics of infinitesimals'' ), Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Vol. III (Berlin, 1998), Doc. Math. 1998, Extra Vol. III, 799-809.〕 In the academia she is most remembered now for her work on history and philosophy of mathematics, as well as for her influence on young generation of researchers. She persuaded Ludwig Wittgenstein when he was visiting Soviet Union in 1935 to give up his idea to relocate to the Soviet Union.〔John Moran, (Wittgenstein and Russia ), ''New Left Review'' May–June 1972.〕
For her work, Yanovskaya received the Order of Lenin and other medals.
She died from diabetes in Moscow.

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