Davis's parents were Jewish immigrants to the United States from Łódź, Poland, and married after they met again in New York City. Davis was born in New York City on March 8, 1928. He grew up in the Bronx, where his parents encouraged him to obtain a full education.[1][2] He graduated from the prestigious Bronx High School of Science in 1944 and went on to receive his bachelor's degree in mathematics from City College in 1948 and his PhD from Princeton University in 1950.[3] His doctoral dissertation, entitled On the Theory of Recursive Unsolvability, was supervised by American mathematician and computer scientist Alonzo Church.[1][2][4]
Davis first worked on Hilbert's tenth problem during his PhD dissertation, working with Alonzo Church. The theorem, as posed by the German mathematician David Hilbert, asks a question: given a Diophantine equation, is there an algorithm that can decide if the equation is solvable?[1] Davis's dissertation put forward a conjecture that the problem was unsolvable. In the 1950s and 1960s, Davis, along with American mathematicians Hilary Putnam and Julia Robinson, made progress toward solving this conjecture. The proof of the conjecture was finally completed in 1970 with the work of Russian mathematician Yuri Matiyasevich. This resulted in the MRDP or the DPRM theorem, named for Davis, Putnam, Robinson, and Matiyasevich.[1] Describing the problem, Davis had earlier mentioned that he found the problem "irresistibly seductive" when he was an undergraduate and later had progressively become his "lifelong obsession".[6]
Davis was married to Virginia Whiteford Palmer, a textile artist. The couple met during their time in the Urbana–Champaign area and subsequently married in 1951.[14]: 8 They had two children.[3] The couple lived in Berkeley, California, after his retirement.[1]
Davis died on January 1, 2023, at age 94.[15] His wife died the same day several hours later.[16]
Davis, Martin (2000). The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing. Norton. ISBN0393047857. Reprinted as Engines of Logic: Mathematicians and the Origin of the Computer. New York: Norton. 2000. ISBN9780393322293.
^Omodeo, E. G., & Policriti, A., eds., Martin Davis on Computability, Computational Logic, and Mathematical Foundations (Berlin/Heidelberg: Springer, 2016), p. 8.
Calvert, Wesley; Harizanov, Valentina; Omodeo, Eugenio G.; Policriti, Alberto; Shlapentokh, Alexandra (August 2024). "In Memory of Martin Davis"(PDF). Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 71 (7): 898–907. doi:10.1090/noti2982.