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For a narrow/printable version of this
webpage click here.
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SyllabusThe topic of this course is Abstract Algebra. The basic approach is to isolate or 'abstract out' the important properties of the fundamental number systems (the complex numbers C, the reals R, the rationals Q, and the integers Z) which we utilized when learning algebra in high school. Then, utilizing these select assumptions or axioms, we see what results follow; there are many important and deep and even beautiful consequences of our relatively few assumptions.We will begin with the notion of a 'group.' A 'group' is a collection of objects (say R) with a distingushed binary operation (say +) satisfying particular properties including associativity, the existence of an identity, and the existence of inverses. We will spend approximately two-thirds of the course in Chapters 1 to 10 becoming thoroughly acquainted with groups by studying specific examples of groups, distinguished groups with further 'nice' properties, subgroups, mappings between groups, and special subsets of groups including cosets and normal subgroups.
The remaining third of the course will be spent in
Chapters 12 to 18 with the notion of a 'ring.'
A 'ring' is a collection of objects (say R) with
two distingushed binary operations (say + and x) satisfying particular properties
including being a commutative (or Abelian) group under the first operation and
having certain 'distributive' relations hold between the operations.
The study of rings will roughly parallel that of groups;
we will study specific examples of rings, distinguished rings including
integral domains and fields, special subsets of rings including subrings and ideals,
and mappings among rings.
Unless reported to me before January 11th,
a scheduling conflict is not a sufficient excuse to take
the Midterm Exam at any time other than the official time listed below.
The Final Exam will occur between March 12th and March 16th.
If you must make travel plans before the schedule for final exams appears,
Do Not make plans to leave Hanover on or before March 16th.
The Final Exam Will Not be given early to accommodate travel plans.
The exams will take place at the following times and places:
You are expected to attend every class.
You have invested a large sum of money for the opportunity to come to class and
I will invest a large amount of time in preparing for class;
I do not want any of us wasting the investments we have made.
Reading assignments will be given daily and should be read before coming to class.
For some of my thoughts on reading mathematics texts,
click here.
Quizzes will be administered at the end of class on Monday covering material presented in
class the previous week.
They will consist of a couple of questions and should only take 10 - 15 minutes to complete.
If you do the homework for the lectures given the previous week (including Friday's homework),
then you should do fine on the quizzes.
Homework problems will be assigned daily and collected the following class period.
Homework will be turned in and picked up from the boxes outside of 103 Bradley Hall.
Late homework will not be accepted and a grade of 0 will be assigned
(of course, exceptions can be made for emergencies such as illness, death, natural disasters...).
The solutions you present must be coherent and written in complete sentences whenever possible.
Simply stating answers or turning in garbled, unclear solutions will result in a grade of 0.
For further details consult the
Homework Schedule.
Collaboration on homework is encouraged (and expected);
although, you should first spend some time in individual concentration to gain
the full benefit of the homework. On the other hand, copying is discouraged.
You should not be leaving a study group with your homework ready
to be turned in; write up your solution sets by yourself.
Also, take care in crafting your own proofs. You should be creating clear, coherent arguments.
Use complete English sentences and pay careful attention to the use of logical connectives.
Mathematics ... may claim to be the most original creation of the human spirit.
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