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Philip Wolfe (mathematician)

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Philip Wolfe (mathematician)

{{Infobox scientist | name = Philip Wolfe | birth_date = | birth_place = San Francisco, California, U.S. | death_date = He and his wife, Hallie, lived in Ossining, New York.

Career In 1954, he was offered an instructorship at Princeton, where he worked on generalizations of linear programming, such as quadratic programming and general non-linear programming, leading to the Frank–Wolfe algorithm in joint work with Marguerite Frank, then a visitor at Princeton. When Maurice Sion was on sabbatical at the Institute for Advanced Study, Sion and Wolfe published in 1957 an example of a zero-sum game without a minimax value. Wolfe joined RAND corporation in 1957, where he worked with George Dantzig, resulting in the now well known Dantzig–Wolfe decomposition method. In 1965, he moved to IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York.

Honors and awards He received the John von Neumann Theory Prize in 1992, jointly with Alan Hoffman.

Selected publications * * * *

References ## External Information *[INFORMS](https://www.informs.org/content/view/full/268747): Biography of Philip Wolfe from the Institute for Operations Research and the management Sciences