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Basic Algebra II
A classic text and standard reference for a generation, this volume and its companion are the work of an expert algebraist who taught at Yale for more than three decades. Nathan Jacobson's books possess a conceptual and theoretical orientation; in addition to their value as classroom texts, they serve as valuable references.
Volume II comprises all of the subjects usually covered in a first-year graduate course in algebra. Topics include categories, universal algebra, modules, basic structure theory of rings, classical representation theory of finite groups, elements of homological algebra with applications, commutative ideal theory, and formally real fields. In addition to the immediate introduction and constant use of categories and functors, it revisits many topics from Volume I with greater depth and sophistication. Exercises appear throughout the text, along with insightful, carefully explained proofs.
Volume II comprises all of the subjects usually covered in a first-year graduate course in algebra. Topics include categories, universal algebra, modules, basic structure theory of rings, classical representation theory of finite groups, elements of homological algebra with applications, commutative ideal theory, and formally real fields. In addition to the immediate introduction and constant use of categories and functors, it revisits many topics from Volume I with greater depth and sophistication. Exercises appear throughout the text, along with insightful, carefully explained proofs.
Reprint of the W. H. Freeman and Company, San Francisco, 1989 edition.
math and science;beginning algebra;mathematics;teaching algebra;learning algebra;math reference;algebra reference;theoretical orientation;universal algebra;homological algebra;commutative ideal theory;formally real fields;explained proofs;abstract algebra;automorphism;students and teachers;scientists;theoretical;Algebra; Graph Theory; Galois Theory; Ring Theory; Nathan Jacobson$14.00
Original: $40.00
-65%Basic Algebra II—
$40.00
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Description
A classic text and standard reference for a generation, this volume and its companion are the work of an expert algebraist who taught at Yale for more than three decades. Nathan Jacobson's books possess a conceptual and theoretical orientation; in addition to their value as classroom texts, they serve as valuable references.
Volume II comprises all of the subjects usually covered in a first-year graduate course in algebra. Topics include categories, universal algebra, modules, basic structure theory of rings, classical representation theory of finite groups, elements of homological algebra with applications, commutative ideal theory, and formally real fields. In addition to the immediate introduction and constant use of categories and functors, it revisits many topics from Volume I with greater depth and sophistication. Exercises appear throughout the text, along with insightful, carefully explained proofs.
Volume II comprises all of the subjects usually covered in a first-year graduate course in algebra. Topics include categories, universal algebra, modules, basic structure theory of rings, classical representation theory of finite groups, elements of homological algebra with applications, commutative ideal theory, and formally real fields. In addition to the immediate introduction and constant use of categories and functors, it revisits many topics from Volume I with greater depth and sophistication. Exercises appear throughout the text, along with insightful, carefully explained proofs.
Reprint of the W. H. Freeman and Company, San Francisco, 1989 edition.
math and science;beginning algebra;mathematics;teaching algebra;learning algebra;math reference;algebra reference;theoretical orientation;universal algebra;homological algebra;commutative ideal theory;formally real fields;explained proofs;abstract algebra;automorphism;students and teachers;scientists;theoretical;Algebra; Graph Theory; Galois Theory; Ring Theory; Nathan Jacobson









