Schwartz was born in The Bronx, New York on January 9, 1930, to Ignatz and Hedwig Schwartz. He attended Stuyvesant High School and went on to City College of New York.[2]
Education
Schwartz received his B.S. (1949) from the City College of New York and his M.A. (1949) and Ph.D. in mathematics (1952) from Yale University. His doctoral thesis was entitled Linear Elliptic Differential Operators[3] and his thesis advisor was Nelson Dunford.[2]
Schwartz authored 18 books and more than 100 papers and technical reports. He wrote the three-volume textbook Linear Operators with Nelson Dunford. He was also the inventor of the Artspeak programming language, which historically ran on mainframes and produced graphical output using a single-color graphical plotter.[4]
Schwartz was previously married to computer scientist Frances E. Allen from 1972 to 1982. He died of liver cancer in 2009 at age 79.
Publications
Nelson Dunford, Jacob T. Schwartz Linear Operators, Part I General Theory ISBN0-471-60848-3,[5] Part II Spectral Theory, Self Adjoint Operators in Hilbert Space ISBN0-471-60847-5,[6] Part III Spectral Operators ISBN0-471-60846-7
Jacob T. Schwartz, Robert B. K. Dewar, Programming With Sets: An Introduction to Setl, Springer (November 1986), ISBN978-0-387-96399-0
Jacob T. Schwartz, The Limits of Artificial Intelligence, found in the Encyclopedia of Artificial Intelligence, 2 vols., John Wiley and Songs, 1987
Jacob T. Schwartz, Mark Kac, and Gian-Carlo Rota, Discrete Thoughts: Essays on Mathematics, Science, and Philosophy, Birkhäuser Boston; 2nd edition (January 11, 2008), ISBN978-0-8176-4774-2
Distinguished Lecturer at the following Universities: University of California, Santa Barbara; Harvard University; MIT; Cornell University; University of Washington; University of Southern California; Trinity College, Dublin
Davis, Martin; Schonberg, Edmond, eds. (2013). From Linear Operators to Computational Biology: Essays in Memory of Jacob T. Schwartz. Springer. ISBN978-1-4471-4281-2.