Kunen was born in New York City in 1943 and died in 2020.[1] He lived in Madison, Wisconsin, with his wife Anne, with whom he had two sons, Isaac and Adam.[3]
Away from the area of large cardinals, Kunen is known for intricate forcing and combinatorial constructions. He proved that it is consistent that Martin's axiom first fails at a singular cardinal and constructed under the continuum hypothesis a compact L-space supporting a nonseparable measure. He also showed that has no increasing chain of length in the standard Cohen model
where the continuum is . The concept of a Jech–Kunen tree is named after him and Thomas Jech.