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  1. Edwin Bidwell Wilson (April 25, 1879 – December 28, 1964) was an American mathematician, statistician, physicist and general polymath. He was the sole protégé of Yale University physicist Josiah Willard Gibbs and was mentor to MIT economist Paul Samuelson . [2]

  2. 2 days ago · Quick Reference. (1879–1964; b. Hartford, CT; d. Brookline, MA) American mathematician. Wilson obtained his AB from Harvard U in 1899 and his PhD (supervised by Gibbs) from Yale in 1901. He left the Yale faculty in 1907 for MIT where he became in turn Professor of Mathematics (1911) and of Physics (1917). His interests centered on ...

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  4. Biography Edwin Wilson's father, Edwin Horace Wilson, was a teacher in a secondary school. His mother was Jane Amelia Bidwell. Wilson attended Harvard University, graduating with a A.B. in 1899. He then decided to work for his doctorate at Yale and there he was a student of Gibbs.

  5. WILSON, EDWIN BIDWELL. ( b. Hartford, Connecticut, 25 April 1879; d. Brookline, Massachusetts, 28 December 1964) mathematics, physics, statistics, public health. The son of a schoolteacher, Wilson graduated B.A. from Harvard in 1899 and Ph.D. from Yale two years later. He studied for a while in Paris, taught mathematics at Yale, and then moved ...

  6. EDWIN BIDWELL WILSON, mathematician, theoretical physi-cist, statistician, and economist, was born at Hartford, Connecticut, on April 25, 1879. He was the son of Edwin Hor-ace and Jane Amelia (Bidwell) Wilson; his father was a teacher and superintendent of schools of Middletown, Con-necticut. As a student at Harvard, Wilson already set the style

  7. Edwin Bidwell Wilson, 1879-1964. Edwin Bildwell Wilson was a famous mathematician, physicist and statistician, with only an amateur's interest in economics. Originating from Connectiuct, E.B. Wilson obtained his B.A. at Harvard in 1899, and promptly enrolled in graduate study under J. Willard Gibbs at Yale, receiving his Ph.D in 1901.

  8. Oct 25, 2016 · While primarily a mathematician, Wilson’s relatively few contributions to economics in the interwar years, particularly two short papers on demand theory (1935 and 1939) and one on business cycles (1934), were not without their influence in Harvard economic...

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