June 08, 2012 <Back to Index>
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Robert John Aumann (Hebrew name: ישראל אומן - Yisrael Aumann, born June 8, 1930) is an Israeli - American mathematician and a member of the United States National Academy of Sciences. He is a professor at the Center for the Study of Rationality in the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel. He also holds a visiting position at Stony Brook University and is one of the founding members of the Center for Game Theory in Economics at Stony Brook. Aumann received the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 2005 for his work on conflict and cooperation through game theory analysis. He shared the prize with Thomas Schelling.
Aumann was born in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, and fled to the United States with his family in 1938, two weeks before the Kristallnacht pogrom. He attended the Rabbi Jacob Joseph School, a yeshiva high school in New York City. He graduated from the City College of New York in 1950 with a B.Sc. in Mathematics. He received his M.Sc. in 1952, and his Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1955, both from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His doctoral dissertation, Asphericity of Alternating Linkages, concerned knot theory. His advisor was George Whitehead, Jr. In 1956 he joined the Mathematics faculty of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and is currently a visiting leading professor at Stony Brook University since 1989. Aumann's greatest contribution was in the realm of repeated games,
which are situations in which players encounter the same situation over
and over again. Aumann was the first to define the concept of correlated equilibrium in game theory, which is a type of equilibrium in non-cooperative games that is more flexible than the classical Nash equilibrium. Furthermore, Aumann has introduced the first purely formal account of the notion of common knowledge in game theory. He collaborated with Lloyd Shapley on the Aumann - Shapley value. He is also known for his agreement theorem, in which he argues that under his given conditions, two Bayesian rationalists with common prior beliefs cannot agree to disagree. Aumann and Maschler used Game Theory also to analyze Talmudic dilemmas. They
were able to solve the mystery about the "division problem", a
long time dilemma of explaining the Talmudic rationale in dividing the
heritage of a late husband to his three wives, depending on the worth
of the heritage compared to its original worth. The article in that matter was dedicated to a son of Aumann, Shlomo, who was killed during the 1982 Lebanon War while serving as a tank gunner in the Israel Defense Forces's armored corps. These are some of the themes of Aumann's Nobel lecture, named "War and Peace": Aumann is a member in the Professors for a Strong Israel (PSI), a right wing political group. Aumann opposed the disengagement from Gaza in 2005 claiming it is a crime against Gush Katif settlers and a serious threat to the security of Israel. Aumann draws on a case in game theory called
the Blackmailer Paradox to demonstrate that giving land to the Arabs is strategically foolish based on the mathematical theory. By presenting an unyielding demand, the Arab states force Israel to "yield to blackmail due to the perception that it will leave the negotiating room with nothing if it is inflexible. As
a result of his political views, and his use of his research to justify
them, the decision to give him the Nobel prize was criticized in the
European press. A petition to cancel his prize garnered signatures from
1,000 academics worldwide. In a speech to a religious Zionist youth movement, Bnei Akiva, Aumann claimed that Israel is in 'deep trouble'. He revealed his belief that the anti-Zionist Satmar Jews
might have been right in their condemnation of the original Zionist
movement. “I fear the Satmars were right.” he said, and quoted a verse:
“Unless the Lord builds a house, its builders toil on it in vain.” (Psalm 127)
Aumann feels that the historical Zionist establishment failed to
transmit its message to its successors, because it was secular. The
only way that Zionism can survive, according to Aumann, is if it has a
religious basis. In 2008, Aumann joined the new political party Ahi led by Effi Eitam and Yitzhak Levy. Aumann has entered the controversy of Bible codes research. In his position as both a religious Jew and
a man of science, the codes research holds special interest to him. He
has partially vouched for the validity of the "Great Rabbis Experiment" by Doron Witztum, Eliyahu Rips, and Yoav Rosenberg, which was published in Statistical Science. Aumann not only arranged for Rips to give a lecture on Torah codes in the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, but sponsored the Witztum - Rips - Rosenberg paper for publication in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The Academy requires a member to sponsor any publication in its Proceedings; the paper was turned down however. In 1996, a committee consisting of Robert J. Aumann, Dror Bar-Natan, Hillel Furstenberg,
Isaak Lapides, and Rips, was formed to examine the results that had
been reported by H.J. Gans regarding the existence of "encoded" text in
the bible foretelling events that took place many years after the Bible
was written. The committee performed two additional tests in the spirit
of the Gans experiments. Both tests failed to confirm the existence of
the putative code. After
a long and interesting analysis of the experiment and the dynamics of
the controversy, stating for example that "almost everybody included
[in the controversy] made up their mind early in the game" Aumann
concluded: "A priori,
the thesis of the Codes research seems wildly improbable... Research
conducted under my own supervision failed to confirm the existence of
the codes - though it also did not establish their non-existence. So I
must return to my a priori estimate, that the Codes phenomenon is improbable".
Aumann
married Esther Schlesinger in April 1955 in Brooklyn. They had met in
1953 when Esther, who was from Israel, was visiting the United States.
The couple had five children; the oldest, Shlomo, was killed in action
in 1982, while serving in the Israeli Army in the 1982 Lebanon War. Esther died of ovarian cancer in October 1998. In late November 2005, Aumann married Esther's widowed sister, Batya Cohn. |