Raymond Flood (mathematician)
Raymond Flood is Emeritus Fellow and a member of the Continuing Education Department at Kellogg College, Oxford,[1] and has been a Professor of Geometry at Gresham College.[2]
Raymond Flood | |
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Raymond Flood at Gresham College, 2012 | |
Nationality | British |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics History of mathematics Computational mathematics Theoretical Physics |
Institutions | University of Oxford Kellogg College Gresham College British Society for the History of Mathematics Committee for the History of Science, Medicine and Technology |
Education
Flood achieved a Bachelor of Science degree at Queens University, Belfast and a master's degree at Linacre College, Oxford. He obtained his PhD from University College, Dublin.[3] Flood obtained his doctorate through part-time study, as he had already acquired a family and a job.[4]
Career
In 1990, Flood was made a Founding Fellow of Kellogg College, Oxford, formally Rewley House. Kellogg College, Oxford was created to look after the interests of mature and part-time students. Flood primarily teaches those students who are either mature, or who study part-time.[4] He has held numerous positions at the College and the University of Oxford, including Curator of the University Libraries and as a University lecturer at the University of Oxford.[1]
Flood has dedicated much of his academic career promoting mathematics and computing to adult audiences. He has been President of the British Society for the History of Mathematics from 2006 until 2009,[5] and also Research Associate in the School of Theoretical Physics, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies.[1] On Gresham College, Flood has said "Gresham College comes from a long tradition of liberal adult education. Allowing people from a variety of backgrounds... to get access to current thinking on the major issues of the day. Gresham College ethos is very similar to my own ethos"[6]
In August 2012, Flood was appointed Gresham Professor of Geometry at Gresham College for a period of three years, replacing John D. Barrow.[7] During his term at the College he delivered series of free public lectures on Shaping Modern Mathematics,[8] Applying Modern Mathematics,[9] and Great Mathematicians, Great Mathematics.[10]
Other Research Work and Publications
Aside from his academic work, Flood is active in communicating mathematics and its history to non-specialist audiences. He has appeared on BBC Radio 4's In Our Time[11] and has lectured on transatlantic voyages with RMS Queen Mary 2.[2]
Flood has produced and co-produced many publications and books on Mathematics. Some of the most recent books with which he has been involved are James Clerk Maxwell: Perspectives on his Life and Work (Oxford University Press, 2014),[12] The Great Mathematicians (Arcturus, 2011), which celebrates the achievements of the great mathematicians in their historical context, and Mathematics in Victorian Britain (Oxford University Press, 2011), which assembles in a single source, research on the history of mathematicians in Victorian Britain that would otherwise be out of reach of the general reader.[13]
References
- Raymond G Flood, Kellogg College (accessed 9 June 2014)
- Professor Raymond Flood, Gresham College (accessed 9 June 2014)
- Raymond Flood Appointed Professor of Geometry at Gresham College (accessed 9 June 2014)
- Video Interview short with Professor Raymond Flood (accessed 22 January 2015)
- 'The British Society for the History of Mathematics' by Robin Wilson and Raymond Flood in Newsletter of the European Mathematics Society, March 2013, Issue 87
- Professor Raymond Flood and Gresham College (accessed 22 January 2015)
- Gresham Professor of Geometry on www.gresham.ac.uk
- Shaping Mathematics series page on www.gresham.ac.uk
- Applying Modern Mathematics series page on www.gresham.ac.uk
- Great Mathematicians, Great Mathematics series page on www.gresham.ac.uk
- The Laws of Motion and Negative Numbers on the BBC In Our Time website (accessed 10 January 2015)
- Jame Clerk Maxwell: Perspectives on his Life and Work listing on the OUP website
- Mathematics in Victorian Britain listing on the OUP website