The theory presented in this book is developed constructively,
is based on a few axioms encapsulating the notion of objects
(points and sets) being apart, and encompasses both point-set
topology and the theory of uniform spaces. While the
classical-logic-based theory of proximity spaces provides some
guidance for the theory of apartness, the notion of
nearness/proximity does not embody enough algorithmic information
for a deep constructive development. The use of constructive
(intuitionistic) logic in this book requires much more technical
ingenuity than one finds in classical proximity theory -
algorithmic information does not come cheaply - but it often
reveals distinctions that are rendered invisible by classical
logic.
In the first chapter the authors outline informal constructive
logic and set theory, and, briefly, the basic notions and notations
for metric and topological spaces. In the second they introduce
axioms for a point-set apartness and then explore some of the
consequences of those axioms. In particular, they examine a natural
topology associated with an apartness space, and relations between
various types of continuity of mappings. In the third chapter the
authors extend the notion of point-set (pre-)apartness
axiomatically to one of (pre-)apartness between subsets of an
inhabited set. They then provide axioms for a quasiuniform space,
perhaps the most important type of set-set apartness space.
Quasiuniform spaces play a major role in the remainder of the
chapter, which covers such topics as the connection between uniform
and strong continuity (arguably the most technically difficult part
of the book), apartness and convergence in function spaces, types
of completeness, and neat compactness. Each chapter has a Notes
section, in which are found comments on the definitions, results,
and proofs, as well as occasional pointers to future work. The book
ends with a Postlude that refers to other constructive approaches
to topology, with emphasis on the relation between apartness spaces
and formal topology.
Largely an exposition of the authors' own research, this is the
first book dealing with the apartness approach to constructive
topology, and is a valuable addition to the literature on
constructive mathematics and on topology in computer science. It is
aimed at graduate students and advanced researchers in theoretical
computer science, mathematics, and logic who are interested in
constructive/algorithmic aspects of topology.
Largely an exposition of the authors' own research, this is the
first book dealing with the apartness approach to constructive
topology, and is a valuable addition to the literature on
constructive mathematics and on topology in computer science. It is
aimed at graduate students and advanced researchers in theoretical
computer science, mathematics, and logic who are interested in
constructive/algorithmic aspects of topology.
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