A History of Abstract AlgebraPrior to the nineteenth century, algebra meant the study of the solution of polynomial equations. By the twentieth century algebra came to encompass the study of abstract, axiomatic systems such as groups, rings, and fields. This presentation provides an account of the history of the basic concepts, results, and theories of abstract algebra. The development of abstract algebra was propelled by the need for new tools to address certain classical problems that appeared unsolvable by classical means. A major theme of the approach in this book is to show how abstract algebra has arisen in attempts to solve some of these classical problems, providing context from which the reader may gain a deeper appreciation of the mathematics involved. Key features: * Begins with an overview of classical algebra * Contains separate chapters on aspects of the development of groups, rings, and fields * Examines the evolution of linear algebra as it relates to other elements of abstract algebra * Highlights the lives and works of six notables: Cayley, Dedekind, Galois, Gauss, Hamilton, and especially the pioneering work of Emmy Noether * Offers suggestions to instructors on ways of integrating the history of abstract algebra into their teaching * Each chapter concludes with extensive references to the relevant literature Mathematics instructors, algebraists, and historians of science will find the work a valuable reference. The book may also serve as a supplemental text for courses in abstract algebra or the history of mathematics. |
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... Natural Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128 8.2.4 Other Works . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129 8.2.5 Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . .
... natural question is therefore whether cubic equations could be solved using similar formulas (see below). Another three thousand years would pass before the answer would be known. It was a great event in algebra when mathematicians of ...
... naturally” when Cardano's formula (see p. 6) is used to solve cubic equations. For example, application of his for√ √ mula to the equation x3 = 9x + 2 gives = = 3 2/2+ (2/2)2 − (9/3)3 + √ 3 2/2 − √ (2/2)2 − (9/3)3 = 3 √ 1 + ...
... natural idea, but it was a fundamental departure in algebra: for the first time in over three millennia one could speak of a general quadratic equation, that is, an equation with (arbitrary) literal coefficients rather than one with ...
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Contents
History of Ring Theory 41 | 40 |
History of Field Theory | 63 |
History of Linear Algebra | 79 |
Emmy Noether and the Advent of Abstract Algebra 91 | 90 |
A Course in Abstract Algebra Inspired by History | 103 |
Biographies of Selected Mathematicians | 113 |
Index 165 | 164 |
18 | 166 |