Rubin wrote five books: three on the axiom of choice, and two more on more general topics in set theory and mathematical logic.
[1][2] Jean Hirsch was born in New York City, graduated from Queens College, City University of New York in 1948, and completed a master's degree at Columbia University in 1949.
[2] She did her doctoral studies at Stanford University, during which time she married and changed her name to Jean Rubin.
McKinsey and Patrick Suppes, was Bi-Modal Logic, Double Closure Algebras and Hilbert Space.
Their son is mathematician and aerospace engineer Arthur Rubin.