Home Page of N. Christopher Phillips
(This page will always be under construction, and is updated at
irregular intervals.
Please bear with me.)
Welcome to my Home Page!
I am a Professor in the
Mathematics Department
at the
University of Oregon.
My research
specialty is
operator
algebras.
I maintain an
operator
algebraist email directory,
whose updates carry
announcements
of interest to operator algebraists, and a page of
WWW operator
algebra resources.
I also maintain several web pages
with information for people attending conferences at the
Mathematics Department at the University of Oregon;
details here.
In Spring 2010, I am teaching
Math 616
(the third quarter of the first year graduate analysis sequence)
and Math 686
(the third quarter of the second year graduate analysis sequence).
Math 686 will probably be devoted mostly to the Tomita-Takesaki theory,
as background for those interested in the
Workshop
for graduate students and postdocs on
Operator Algebras and Conformal Field Theory,
16--21 August 2010, at the University of Oregon,
main lecturer
André
Henriques.
In June 2009, I gave a one week
course
on crossed product C*-algebras,
at the International Summer School on Operator Algebras and Applications
in Lisbon, Portugal.
A draft of a related set of lecture notes is available on the course
page.
Lectures
at the Shanghai Special Week on Operator Algebras.
In December 2009, I am giving a short
course
on crossed product C*-algebras,
Seoul National University.
A draft of a related set of lecture notes is available on the course
page,
and files of the slides used will be posted there.
I remain involved with the organization of the
West Coast Operator Algebra Seminars (WCOAS).
Here are the locations of the next several:
Sign up for future information by joining the
WCOAS
confirmed opt-in mailing list.
Current interest:
Five
Year Diversity Plan Draft, May 2005,
and
what
is wrong with it.
Links (to be expanded in the future):
-
Watch what you say on campus:
-
Common
errors in undergraduate mathematics
(especially in calculus courses),
and
Errors
made by calculators and computers.
-
Research by academic economists at UCLA
shows how Franklin Roosevelt's "New Deal" socialist policies
turned a recession into a Great Depression:
From the press release:
"New Deal policies signed
into law 71 years ago [1933] thwarted
economic recovery for seven long years."
One of the biggest villains:
"specific anti-competition and pro-labor measures
that Roosevelt promoted and signed into law June 16, 1933".
In short, the Great Depression was a failure of socialism,
not of capitalism.
-
Underpublicized political evil:
-
The
Duke Lacrosse hoax/attempted frame.
In particular, read
here
and
here
how
88
Duke faculty
racists,
from programs like Cultural Anthropology, History,
Sociology, African and African-American Studies,
and Women's Studies,
many of them
academic
frauds,
formed a media lynch mob
(example)
against three
white lacrosse players accused of a
rape
that never even happened.
Read
here
about the egregious bias of many major media outlets,
with the New York Times in a leading role.
See
Durham-in-Wonderland
for much more information about many aspects of the case.
-
Partners in Hate:
Chomsky and the Holocaust Deniers,
Noam Chomsky's politics exposed by
Werner Cohn,
Professor Emeritus of Sociology, University of British Columbia.
-
Chomsky Lies
(about the Pol Pot genocide in Cambodia).
Further documentation is in Chapter 3 of an
undergraduate honors thesis
in political science
by Cambodian refugee
Sophal Ear.
Contrast what Noam Chomsky wrote with first person accounts of
what really happened
in Cambodia.
-
Exposing pseudoscience, antiscience, and other superstitions:
-
See the intellectual bankruptcy of postmodern
"cultural studies of science"
exposed
by physicist Alan Sokal.
-
Quackwatch:
the lowdown on alternative medicine.
-
An
Index to Creationist Claims
(at The TalkOrigins Archive).
This site does for creationism (but on a much smaller scale)
what Quackwatch does for alternative medicine.
(The site does have a link to a book.)
-
Please
let me know about sites that expose other widespread pseudoscientific
superstitions.
-
Computing and the internet:
-
Stop junk email. Help
CAUCE
(the Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial Email)
support
H.R. 1748,
"The Netizens Protection Act of 1997"
(the "Smith Bill", by Rep. Christopher Smith, R-NJ).
Here are collections of spam I have received:
page 1,
page 2,
page 3,
page 4,
page 5,
and page 6.
Please don't do business with these people or support their
political causes.
Here I single out some particularly persistent spammers:
Here is a spam experiment.
-
Safe
Computing.
The author of that page uses Windows, but here is
an easy summary of something that is a bit more drastic and covers most
of the points made:
Don't use anything from Microsoft; don't use an
email program which understands either attachments or html;
turn off all outside access to your computer (file sharing, etc.); and
always run web browsers with cookies, java, and javascript turned off,
and so that they don't automatically open things like Microsoft Word
documents.
-
Virus hoaxes: Please
don't recirculate email messages warning about these nonexistent
viruses.
-
Oregon weather
and
Eugene
weather
(from a source that hasn't spammed me).
N. Christopher Phillips
Department of Mathematics
University of Oregon
Eugene OR 97403-1222
U.S.A.
Phone: 541-346-4714
Email me.
Normally, I read plain text (US 7 bit ASCII) only.
In particular:
Last significant change: 25 March 2007.
(Changes to the list of other links at the bottom are not
considered "significant".)