Cobham's thesis
0 sources
Cobham's thesis
Summary
Cobham's thesis is a hypothesis[1]. It draws 22 Wikipedia views per month (hypothesis category, ranking #115 of 235).[2]
Key Facts
- Cobham's thesis's instance of is recorded as hypothesis[3].
- Alan Cobham is named after Cobham's thesis[4].
- Jack Edmonds is named after Cobham's thesis[5].
- Cobham's thesis's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/091_zr[6].
- Cobham's thesis's facet of is recorded as computational complexity theory[7].
- Cobham's thesis's different from is recorded as Cobham's theorem[8].
- Cobham's thesis's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 76459452[9].
Body
Designation and Status
Cobham's thesis's instance of is recorded as hypothesis[3].
History and Context
Things named after include Alan Cobham[4], a mathematician[10], 1927–2011[11], of United States[12] and Jack Edmonds[5], a mathematician[13], b. 1934[14], of Canada[15], awarded the John von Neumann Theory Prize[16], specialised in combinatorics[17].
Why It Matters
Cobham's thesis draws 22 Wikipedia views per month (hypothesis category, ranking #115 of 235).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18]