Jean Alexandre Dieudonné was a French mathematician, one of the most prominent members of the group Bourbaki. He helped Grothendieck in writing EGA and, together with Laurent Schwartz, advised Grothendieck in his early (pre-thesis) research in analysis. Apart from Bourbaki activities, Dieudonné was prolific in expository writing, having a rare “photographic” memory and high working habits (writing steadily at least 5 pages per day in the best period), immense erudition and strong attitude on all topics. Comparatively he was much less productive in original research - however most important is his development of the study of (Cartier-)Dieudonné modules arising in theory of formal groups. There is a theorem in general topology having his name. He is also a noted historian of mathematics, producing works on history of algebraic/differential topology, algebraic geometry, and functional analysis, also some entries in DSB (notably Poincare and Cartan).
Introducing the Dieudonné determinant:
On algebraic topology and differential topology:
Last revised on November 26, 2020 at 15:57:10. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.