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Daniel Kan (Rev #14) in nLab

not to be confused with Daniel Kahn


Clark Barwick has posted (on 7 August 2013) the following:

On Sunday, 4 August, 2013, Daniel M. Kan died peacefully at his home in Newton, MA, surrounded by his family. It was his 86th birthday. There was a small burial service Monday afternoon.

Dan received his Ph.D in 1955, and after short-term positions at Columbia, Princeton, and Hebrew University, he joined the Department of Mathematics at MIT in 1959, where he remained until his retirement in 1993. Dan continued to do mathematics until the last week of his life.

In his long career, Dan published more than 70 papers with 15 coauthors. His lifelong mathematical pursuit was abstract homotopy theory, and many of his ideas were so natural and flexible that they quickly became incorporated into the very fabric of algebraic topology. He supervised 15 Ph.D students (all of them at MIT), and he influenced many more through his unique seminar in algebraic topology, which today is known as the Kan Seminar.

Selected writings

On (enhancement and generalization of) Elmendorf's theorem in equivariant homotopy theory:

On homotopy commutative diagrams:

On homotopy limits:

Revision on March 29, 2021 at 20:33:02 by RodMcGuire See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.