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The author, who died in 1984, is well-known both as a person and
through his research in mathematical logic and theoretical computer
science. In the first part of the book he presents the new
classical theory of finite automata as unary algebras which he
himself invented about 30 years ago. Many results, like his work on
structure lattices or his characterization of regular sets by
generalized regular rules, are unknown to a wider audience. In the
second part of the book he extends the theory to general
(non-unary, many-sorted) algebras, term rewriting systems, tree
automata, and pushdown automata. Essentially Buchi worked
independent of other rersearch, following a novel and stimulating
approach. He aimed for a mathematical theory of terms, but could
not finish the book. Many of the results are known by now, but to
work further along this line presents a challenging research
program on the borderline between universal algebra, term rewriting
systems, and automata theory. For the whole book and again within
each chapter the author starts at an elementary level, giving
careful explanations and numerous examples and exercises, and then
leads up to the research level. In this way he covers the basic
theory as well as many nonstandard subjects. Thus the book serves
as a textbook for both the beginner and the advances student, and
also as a rich source for the expert.
J. Richard Biichi is well known for his work in mathematical logic
and theoretical computer science. (He himself would have sharply
objected to the qualifier "theoretical," because he more or less
identified science and theory, using "theory" in a broader sense
and "science" in a narrower sense than usual.) We are happy to
present here this collection of his papers. I (DS)1 worked with
Biichi for many years, on and off, ever since I did my Ph.D. thesis
on his Sequential Calculus. His way was to travel locally, not
globally: When we met we would try some specific problem, but
rarely dis cussed research we had done or might do. After he died
in April 1984 I sifted through the manuscripts and notes left
behind and was dumbfounded to see what areas he had been in.
Essentially I knew about his work in finite au tomata, monadic
second-order theories, and computability. But here were at least
four layers on his writing desk, and evidently he had been working
on them all in parallel. I am sure that many people who knew Biichi
would tell an analogous story."
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