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Algebras, Lattices, Varieties, Volume I [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 368 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 835 g
  • Sari: Chelsea Publications
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jul-2018
  • Kirjastus: American Mathematical Society
  • ISBN-10: 1470442957
  • ISBN-13: 9781470442958
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 368 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 835 g
  • Sari: Chelsea Publications
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jul-2018
  • Kirjastus: American Mathematical Society
  • ISBN-10: 1470442957
  • ISBN-13: 9781470442958
Teised raamatud teemal:
This book presents the foundations of a general theory of algebras. Often called ``universal algebra'', this theory provides a common framework for all algebraic systems, including groups, rings, modules, fields, and lattices. Each chapter is replete with useful illustrations and exercises that solidify the reader's understanding.

The book begins by developing the main concepts and working tools of algebras and lattices, and continues with examples of classical algebraic systems like groups, semigroups, monoids, and categories. The essence of the book lies in Chapter 4, which provides not only basic concepts and results of general algebra, but also the perspectives and intuitions shared by practitioners of the field. The book finishes with a study of possible uniqueness of factorizations of an algebra into a direct product of directly indecomposable algebras.

There is enough material in this text for a two semester course sequence, but a one semester course could also focus primarily on Chapter 4, with additional topics selected from throughout the text.
Introduction 1(4)
Preliminaries 5(6)
Chapter 1 Basic Concepts
11(25)
1.1 Algebras and Operations
11(8)
1.2 Subalgebras, Homomorphisms, and Direct Products
19(5)
1.3 Generation of Subalgebras
24(3)
1.4 Congruence Relations and Quotient Algebras
27(9)
Chapter 2 Lattices
36(64)
2.1 Fundamental Concepts
36(8)
2.2 Complete Lattices and Closure Systems
44(9)
2.3 Modular Lattices: The Rudiments
53(8)
2.4 Modular Lattices wit the Finite Chain Condition
61(17)
2.5 Distributive Lattices
78(12)
2.6 Congruence Relations on Lattices
90(10)
Chapter 3 Unary and Binary Operations
100(42)
3.1 Introduction
100(3)
3.2 Unary Algebras
103(9)
3.3 Semigroups
112(6)
3.4 Groups. Quasigroups, and Latin Squares
118(10)
3.5 Representations in End A and Sym A
128(5)
3.6 Categories
133(9)
Chapter 4 Fundamental Algebraic Results
142(117)
4.1 Algebras and Clones
142(7)
4.2 Isomorphism Theorems
149(4)
4.3 Congruences
153(6)
4.4 Direct and Subdirect Representations
159(9)
4.5 The Subdirect Representation Theorem
168(13)
4.6 Algebraic Lattices
181(14)
4.7 Permuting Congruences
195(11)
4.8 Projective Geometries
206(12)
4.9 Distributive Congruence Lattices
218(1)
4.10 Class Operators and Varieties
219(7)
4.11 Free Algebras and the HSP Theorem
226(18)
4.12 Equivalence and Interpretation of Varieties
244(6)
4.13 Commutator Theory
250(9)
Chapter 5 Unique Factorization
259(78)
5.1 Introduction and Examples
259(9)
5.2 Direct Factorization and Isotopy
268(8)
5.3 Consequences of Ore's Theorem
276(6)
5.4 Algebras with a Zero Element
282(13)
5.5 The Center of an Algebra with Zero
295(5)
5.6 Some Refinement Theorems
300(19)
5.7 Cancellation and Absorption
319(23)
Bibliography 337(26)
Table of Notation
342(6)
Index of Names
348(2)
Index of Terms
350(13)
Additional Bibliography 363(2)
Books and Reports
363(1)
Selected Articles
363(2)
List of Errata 365
Ralph N. McKenzie, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN.

George F. McNulty, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC.

Walter F. Taylor, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO.