Ideal Theory

In mathematics, ideal theory is the theory of ideals in commutative rings; and is the precursor name for the contemporary subject of commutative algebra. The name grew out of the central considerations, such as the Lasker-Noether theorem in algebraic geometry, and the ideal class group in algebraic number theory, of the commutative algebra of the first quarter of the twentieth century. It was used in the influential van der Waerden text on abstract algebra from around 1930. The ideal theory in question had been based on elimination theory, but in line with David Hilbert's taste moved away from algorithmic methods. Grbner basis theory has now reversed the trend, for computer algebra. The importance of the idea in general of a module, more general than an ideal, probably led to the perception that ideal theory was too narrow a description. Valuation theory, too, was an important technical extension, and was used by Helmut Hasse and Oscar Zariski. Bourbaki used commutative algebra; sometimes local algebra is applied to the theory of local rings. D. G. Northcott's 1953 Cambridge Tract Ideal Theory (reissued 2004 under the same title) was one of the final appearances of the name.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
hiss
excision theorem
william m. hoge
richmond and danville railroad
iso 14750
sejmik
north west frontier (military history)
poser porn
gray's anatomy (1996 movie)
carlos eugenio vides casanova
relative homology
airuk
herbert williams
intermec
sender donebach
burns road
when johnny comes marching home
samuel greg
't hof van commerce
agincourt
jerky boys 4
sender aholming
gytrash
oxygenation
prime television new zealand
panchayat
multi fibre arrangement
longwave transmitter solec kujawski
louis t. wigfall
ford mn platform
bob graham round
ernst otto fischer
devla
vegard ulvang
thai chinese
saint pol
longwave transmitter raszyn
patrick coveney
mount's bay
north island volcanic plateau
rashtriya rifles
carla moran
sydenham river (lake huron watershed)
troll kingdom