Lambek was born in Leipzig, Germany, where he attended a Gymnasium.[3] He came to England in 1938 as a refugee on the Kindertransport.[2] From there he was interned as an enemy alien and deported to a prison work camp in New Brunswick, Canada. There, he began in his spare time a mathematical apprenticeship with Fritz Rothberger, also
interned, and wrote the McGill Junior Matriculation in fall of 1941.[3] In the spring of 1942, he was released and settled in Montreal, where he entered studies at McGill University, graduating with an honours mathematics degree in 1945 and an MSc a year later.[4] In 1950, he completed his doctorate under Hans Zassenhaus becoming McGill's first PhD in mathematics.
Lambek retired in 1992 but continued his involvement at McGill's mathematics department. In 2000 a festschrift celebrating Lambek's contributions to mathematical structures in computer science was published.[6] On the occasion of Lambek's 90th birthday, a collection Categories and Types in Logic, Language, and Physics was produced in tribute to him.[7]
— (1966). Completions of categories. Seminar lectures given in 1966 in Zürich. Lecture Notes in Mathematics, No. 24. Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag. MR0209330.
— (1971). Torsion theories, additive semantics, and rings of quotients. Lecture Notes in Mathematics. Vol. 177. Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag. MR0284459.
— (2008). From word to sentence: a computational algebraic approach to grammar. Polimetrica. ISBN978-88-7699-117-2.
Articles
Lambek, Joachim (1951), "The immersibility of a semigroup into a group", Canadian Journal of Mathematics, 3: 34–43, doi:10.4153/CJM-1951-005-8, S2CID124979541
— (1969). "Deductive systems and categories II. Standard constructions and closed categories". Lecture Notes in Mathematics. Vol. 86. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg. pp. 76–122. doi:10.1007/bfb0079385. ISBN978-3-540-04605-9. ISSN0075-8434.
^Casadio, Claudia; Coeke, Bob; Moortgat, Michael; Scott, Philip, eds. (2014), Categories and Types in Logic, Language, and Physics: Essays Dedicated to Jim Lambek on the Occasion of His 90th Birthday, Springer-Verlag