AbstractIn collecting material for an autobiographical statement, I realized that I had been privileged to experience and participate in the emergence and evolution of approximation theory across some 60 years. As a student and then as a professional, I had observed the several strands of development within this exciting enterprise. As the son of a German emigré family, in England and Canada, I was schooled on two continents, comfortable with three languages, and exposed to a world of cultural contrasts. In my studies at Toronto (1948–1951), I was exposed to expatriate lecturers who had worked with the British and Russian pioneers in Fourier analysis and approximation. The Cambridge lecturing and tutoring style that permeated Toronto at the...