The Fields Institute Turns Twenty-Five 170725 Final book with covers | Page 57

CHAPTER 8 Practical Matters Derek Corneil “[Fields] has always strongly resisted putting boundaries around mathematics ... In short, all Fields Institute doors are open to everything mathematical.” When Ontario initiated the Ontario Centres of Excellence program in 1985–86, one of the requirements was that proposed centres had to have strong support from industry. Seven winners were announced but, as with the Nobel Prize, mathematics was overlooked. It is possible at that time that the notion of a mathematics institute would not have been able to attract the necessary industrial support. It is also possible that mathematicians in their separate cubby holes of pure mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, and the infant field of computer science, could not have proposed a coherent, inclusive mathematics research institute. But shortly later they could and did. It began with Bill Shadwick, who gained the support of the Faculty of Mathematics at the University of Waterloo,