Alfred James Lotka (March 2, 1880 - December 5, 1949) was a US mathematician, physical chemist, and statistician famous for his work in population dynamics and energetics.
Life
Born in Lemberg,
Austria-Hungary (now
L'viv,
Ukraine), Lotka's parents were
US nationals and he was educated internationally, including a degree at the
University of Birmingham,
England. In
1935, he married Romola Beattie. They had no children. His varied working life included:
While at Johns Hopkins, Lotka completed his book Elements of Physical Biology (1924) in which he extended the work of Pierre François Verhulst and Vito Volterra. His name is most famously associated with the Lotka-Volterra equation of population dynamics.
Energetics of evolution
Lotka proposed the theory that the
Darwinian concept of
natural selection could be quantified as a physical law. The law that he proposed was that the selective principle of evolution was one which favoured the maximum useful energy flow transformation. The general systems ecologist
Howard T. Odum later applied Lotka's proposal as a central guiding feature of his work in ecosystems ecology. Odum called Lotka's law the
maximum power principle.
Honors
Obituary
- Louis I. Dublin 'Alfred James Lotka, 1880-1949,' Journal of the American Statistical Association, Vol. 45, No. 249 (Mar., 1950), pp. 138-139.
See also
References
The Dover volume contains a list of Lotka's technical papers.
1880 births | 1949 deaths | Statisticians
Alfred James Lotka | Alfred James Lotka | アルフレッド・ロトカ