This book presents, in his own words, the life of Hugo Steinhaus
(1887-1972), noted Polish mathematician of Jewish background, educator,
and mathematical popularizer. A student of Hilbert, a pioneer of the
foundations of probability and game theory, and a contributor to the
development of functional analysis, he was one of those instrumental to
the extraordinary flowering of Polish mathematics before and after World
War I. In particular, it was he who "discovered" the great Stefan
Banach. Exhibiting his great integrity and wit, Steinhaus's personal
story of the turbulent times he survived - including two world wars and
life postwar under the Soviet heel - cannot but be of consuming
interest. His account of the years spent evading Nazi terror is
especially moving. The steadfast honesty and natural dignity he
maintained while pursuing a life of demanding scientific and
intellectual enquiry in the face of encroaching calamity and chaos show
him to be truly a mathematician for all seasons.
The present work will be of great interest not only to mathematicians
wanting to learn some of the details of the mathematical blossoming that
occurred in Poland in the first half of the 20th century, but
also to anyone wishing to read a first-hand account of the history of
those unquiet times in Europe - and indeed world-wide - by someone of
uncommon intelligence and forthrightness situated near an eye of the
storm.