Education
He graduated from the School of Fine Arts in Warsaw, then studied physics and mathematics.
He graduated from the School of Fine Arts in Warsaw, then studied physics and mathematics.
In 1872, he was a doctor at the University of Saint St. Petersburg. In the period (1857–1862), he was a professor of higher mathematics and mechanics at the School of Fine Arts in Warsaw and eventually the University of Warsaw (1862–1887). He wrote the acclaimed papers: "On the phenomena of induction," which was awarded a gold medal at the University of Saint St. Petersburg, as well as "higher algebra lectures and calculus," "Introduction to higher growth," Method of multiplication and algebraic functions of symmetric rational.".