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E-raamat: Fuzzy Topology [World Scientific e-raamat]

(Sichuan Union Univ, China), (Sichuan Univ, China)
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Fuzzy set theory provides us with a framework which is wider than that of classical set theory. Various mathematical structures, whose features emphasize the effects of ordered structure, can be developed on the theory. Fuzzy topology is one such branch, combining ordered structure with topological structure. This branch of mathematics, emerged from the background processing fuzziness, and locale theory, proposed from the angle of pure mathematics by the great French mathematician Ehresmann, comprise the two most active aspects of topology on lattice, which affect each other.This book is the first monograph to systematically reflect the up-to-date state of fuzzy topology. It emphasizes the so-called pointed approach and the effects of stratification structure appearing in fuzzy sets.The monograph can serve as a reference book for mathematicians, researchers, and graduate students working in this branch of mathematics. After an appropriate rearrangements of the chapters and sections, it can also be used as a text for undergraduates.
Preface vii
Chapter
1. Preliminaries
1(31)
1.1 Sets and Lattices
1(11)
1.2 Operations on Lattices
12(13)
1.3 Characterizations of Complete Distributivity
25(7)
Chapter
2. Fuzzy Topological Spaces
32(28)
2.1 Fuzzy Sets and Mappings
32(8)
2.2 Fuzzy Topological Spaces
40(6)
2.3 Multiple Choice Principle and Neighborhood Structure
46(11)
2.4 Continuous Mappings
57(3)
Chapter
3. Operations on Fuzzy Topological Spaces
60(13)
3.1 Subspaces
60(5)
3.2 Product Spaces
65(5)
3.3 Sum Spaces
70(1)
3.4 Quotient Spaces
71(2)
Chapter
4. L-valued Stratification Spaces
73(21)
4.1 Stratified Spaces and Stratifizations
73(2)
4.2 Weakly Induced Spaces
75(5)
4.3 Induced Spaces
80(9)
4.4 Functors w(L) and t(L)
89(3)
4.5 Analytic and Topological Characterizations of Completely Distributive Law
92(2)
Chapter
5. Convergence Theory
94(22)
5.1 Net Convergence Theory
94(8)
5.2 Filter Convergence Theory
102(9)
5.3 Convergence Classes
111(5)
Chapter
6. Connectedness
116(8)
6.1 Connectedness
116(6)
6.2 Connectedness of L-valued Stratification Spaces
122(2)
Chapter
7. Some Properties Related to Cardinals
124(10)
7.1 Weight, Characteristic and Density
124(5)
7.2 Countability
129(1)
7.3 On L-valued Weakly Induced Spaces
130(4)
Chapter
8. Separation (I)
134(17)
8.1 Quasi-T(o)-, Sub-T(o)-, T(o)-, and T1-separations
134(5)
8.2 T(2)-separation
139(6)
8.3 Regularity
145(6)
Chapter
9. Separation (II)
151(36)
9.1 L-fuzzy Unit Interval -- I(L) and I(L)
151(10)
9.2 Complete Regularity, Normality and Embedding Theory
161(20)
9.3 Insertion Theorem
181(6)
Chapter
10. Compactness
187(23)
10.1 Some Kinds of Compactness in Fuzzy Topological Spaces
187(2)
10.2 N-compactness
189(6)
10.3 Tychonoff Product Theorem
195(5)
10.4 Comparison of Different Compactness in Fuzzy Topological Spaces
200(10)
Chapter
11. Compactification
210(12)
11.1 Basic Theory of Compactification
210(8)
11.2 Stone-Cech Compactification
218(4)
Chapter
12. Paracompactness
222(25)
12.1 Local Finiteness and Flinty Finiteness
222(4)
12.2 Paracompactness and Flinty Paracompactness
226(16)
12.3 Separations, Lindel of Property and Paracompactness
242(5)
Chapter
13. Uniformity and Proximity
247(38)
13.1 Uniformity
247(30)
13.2 Proximity
277(8)
Chapter
14. Metric Spaces
285(23)
14.1 Metrics in Hutton's Sense and Erceg's Sense
285(6)
14.2 Pointwise Characterizations of Metrics
291(5)
14.3 Metrization
296(12)
Chapter
15. Relations between Fuzzy Topological Spaces and Locales
308(19)
15.1 Related Results in Locales
308(6)
15.2 Separations in Fuzzy Topological Spaces and Locales
314(1)
15.3 Relations between Fuzzy Topological Spaces and Locales
315(5)
15.4 Fuzzy Stone Representation Theorem
320(7)
Bibliography 327(10)
Index 337