Varieties of GroupsSpringer Science & Business Media, 6 дек. 2012 г. - Всего страниц: 194 Varieties of algebras are equationally defined classes of algebras, or "primitive classes" in MAL'CEV'S terminology. They made their first explicit appearance in the 1930's, in Garrett BIRKHOFF'S paper on "The structure of abstract algebras" and B. H. NEUMANN'S paper "Identical relations in groups I". For quite some time after this, there is little published evidence that the subject remained alive. In fact, however, as part of "universal algebra", it aroused great interest amongst those who had access, directly or indirectly, to PHILIP HALL'S lectures given at Cambridge late in the 1940's. More recently, category theory has provided a general setting since varieties, suitably interpreted, are very special examples of categories. Whether their relevance to category theory goes beyond this, I do not know. And I doubt that the category theoretical approach to varieties will be more than a fringe benefit to group theory. Whether or not my doubts have substance, the present volume owes its existence not to the fact that varieties fit into a vastly more general pattern, but to the benefit group theory has derived from the classification of groups by varietal properties. It is this aspect of the study of varieties that seems to have caused its reappearance in the literature in the 1950's. |
Содержание
Product Varieties | 38 |
Nilpotent Varieties | 77 |
Miscellaneous Properties of Relatively Free Groups | 110 |
The Laws of Finite Groups | 145 |
| 181 | |
| 187 | |
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A₁ A₂ abelian group absolutely free group assume assumption automorphism B. H. NEUMANN b₁ basic commutators belongs c₁ cartesian chief factor commutators of weight contains Corollary critical groups Cross variety D₁ defined direct product discriminates elements endomorphism epimorphism exponent zero F₁ factor group finite group finite number finite rank finitely based finitely generated group free abelian free product freely fully invariant subgroup group F group of rank groups of exponent H₁ hence homomorphism indecomposable induction infinite integer intersection isomorphic left-normed Lemma locally finite m₁ mapping metabelian groups minimal normal subgroup modulo monolith n-generator group N₁ nilpotent groups nilpotent of class non-abelian non-trivial normal closure p-groups polynilpotent prime Proof proper factors relatively free group representation residually finite residually finite p-groups set of words shows soluble subset Theorem trivial U-free U₁ V-free V₁ variables verbal subgroup w₁ wreath product x₁
