Cartan, Henri

Homological algebra - Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1999. - xv, 390p.: pbk.: 23 cm - Princeton Landmarks in Mathematics and Physics .

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When this book was written, methods of algebraic topology had caused revolutions in the world of pure algebra. To clarify the advances that had been made, Cartan and Eilenberg tried to unify the fields and to construct the framework of a fully fledged theory. The invasion of algebra had occurred on three fronts through the construction of cohomology theories for groups, Lie algebras, and associative algebras. This book presents a single homology (and also cohomology) theory that embodies all three; a large number of results is thus established in a general framework. Subsequently, each of the three theories is singled out by a suitable specialization, and its specific properties are studied.


The starting point is the notion of a module over a ring. The primary operations are the tensor product of two modules and the groups of all homomorphisms of one module into another. From these, “higher order” derived of operations are obtained, which enjoy all the properties usually attributed to homology theories. This leads in a natural way to the study of “functors” and of their “derived functors.”

https://press.princeton.edu/books/paperback/9780691049915/homological-algebra?srsltid=AfmBOooWFqQOjyRP7Eq8WIjNWOh2tnHGc5blXX--jlUh8luESM-Mr27-

9780691049915


Algebraic Topology
Cohomology Theory
Pure Algebra
Module Theory
Ring And Module Structures
Tensor Products

513.83 CAR