This book presents a graduate-level course on modern algebra. It can be used as a teaching book owing to the copious exercises and as a source book for those who wish to use the major theorems of algebra.
The course begins with the basic combinatorial principles of algebra: posets, chain conditions, Galois connections, and dependence theories. Here, the general JordanHolder Theorem becomes a theorem on interval measures of certain lower semilattices. This is followed by basic courses on groups, rings and modules; the arithmetic of integral domains; fields; the categorical point of view; and tensor products.
Beginning with introductory concepts and examples, each chapter proceeds gradually towards its more complex theorems. Proofs progress step-by-step from first principles. Many interesting results reside in the exercises, for example, the proof that ideals?in a Dedekind domain are generated by at most two elements. The emphasis throughout is on real understanding as opposed to memorizing a catechism and so some chapters offer curiosity-driven appendices for the self-motivated student.
Basics.- Basic Combinatorial Principles of Algebra.- Review of Elementary Group Properties.- Permutation Groups and Group Actions.- Normal Structure of Groups.- Generation in Groups.- Elementary Properties of Rings.- Elementary properties of Modules.- The Arithmetic of Integral Domains.- Principal Ideal Domains and Their Modules.- Theory of Fields.- Semiprime Rings.- Tensor Products.
While this book requires a level of mathematical maturity that can reasonably be expected from a student entering graduate study, it does not assume too muchand that may be its greatest strength. & Exercises are interesting and challenging. The work is well suited for a full-year graduate course in algebra. The benefit of years of teaching by both authors & is evident in the style and exposition. (R. J. Bumcrot, Mathematical Reviews, Felƒ-