Jesper Lützen


Jesper Lützen is a Danish historian of mathematics and the physical sciences.

Biography

Lützen graduated in mathematics in 1976 from Aarhus University, where he also earned his Ph.D. in 1980 in the history of science under the supervision of Kirsti Andersen. In 1980 he was a visiting scholar at Yale University and became a temporary lecturer at Odense University and from 1985 a lecturer at the University of Copenhagen. In 1990 he received his habilitation from the University of Copenhagen. There he has been a lecturer since 1989 and since 2005 a professor of mathematics history at the University of Copenhagen's Faculty of Mathematics. He has been a visiting scholar at Utrecht and at several other places: Paris, MIT's Dibner Institute, the Mittag-Leffler Institute of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the California Institute of Technology, the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the University of Toronto.
Lützen's research deals with the prehistory of distributions, as well as Joseph Liouville and Heinrich Hertz and Hertz's mechanics. The prehistory of the theory of distributions was also the topic of Lützen's dissertation.
He is a co-editor of the Archive for History of Exact Sciences, Historia Mathematica, and the Revue d'histoire des mathématiques, as well as Springer Verlag's book series Archimedes: New Sources and Studies in the History of Mathematics and Physical Sciences with series editor Jed Buchwald.
In 1990, Lützen was an Invited Speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Kyoto. Since 1993 he has been a full member of the International Academy of the History of Science. He is, since 1986, a member of the Danish National Committee for the History and Philosophy of Science and is, since 1990, the Danish representative in the International Commission on the History of Mathematics. He was elected in 1996 a member of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters and in 2012 a Fellow of the American Mathematical Society. He is a member of the USA-based History of Science Society and a member of the Danish Mathematical Society. He is also a member of the Danish Society for the History of Science, whose president he was from 1995 to 2006 and whose secretary he has been since 2007.
He is married since 1990 and has three daughters.

Selected publications