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This is a monograph on fixed point theory, covering the purely
metric aspects of the theory-particularly results that do not
depend on any algebraic structure of the underlying space.
Traditionally, a large body of metric fixed point theory has been
couched in a functional analytic framework. This aspect of the
theory has been written about extensively. There are four classical
fixed point theorems against which metric extensions are usually
checked. These are, respectively, the Banach contraction mapping
principal, Nadler's well known set-valued extension of that
theorem, the extension of Banach's theorem to nonexpansive
mappings, and Caristi's theorem. These comparisons form a
significant component of this book. This book is divided into three
parts. Part I contains some aspects of the purely metric theory,
especially Caristi's theorem and a few of its many extensions.
There is also a discussion of nonexpansive mappings, viewed in the
context of logical foundations. Part I also contains certain
results in hyperconvex metric spaces and ultrametric spaces. Part
II treats fixed point theory in classes of spaces which, in
addition to having a metric structure, also have geometric
structure. These specifically include the geodesic spaces, length
spaces and CAT(0) spaces. Part III focuses on distance spaces that
are not necessarily metric. These include certain distance spaces
which lie strictly between the class of semimetric spaces and the
class of metric spaces, in that they satisfy relaxed versions of
the triangle inequality, as well as other spaces whose distance
properties do not fully satisfy the metric axioms.
This is a monograph on fixed point theory, covering the purely
metric aspects of the theory-particularly results that do not
depend on any algebraic structure of the underlying space.
Traditionally, a large body of metric fixed point theory has been
couched in a functional analytic framework. This aspect of the
theory has been written about extensively. There are four classical
fixed point theorems against which metric extensions are usually
checked. These are, respectively, the Banach contraction mapping
principal, Nadler's well known set-valued extension of that
theorem, the extension of Banach's theorem to nonexpansive
mappings, and Caristi's theorem. These comparisons form a
significant component of this book. This book is divided into three
parts. Part I contains some aspects of the purely metric theory,
especially Caristi's theorem and a few of its many extensions.
There is also a discussion of nonexpansive mappings, viewed in the
context of logical foundations. Part I also contains certain
results in hyperconvex metric spaces and ultrametric spaces. Part
II treats fixed point theory in classes of spaces which, in
addition to having a metric structure, also have geometric
structure. These specifically include the geodesic spaces, length
spaces and CAT(0) spaces. Part III focuses on distance spaces that
are not necessarily metric. These include certain distance spaces
which lie strictly between the class of semimetric spaces and the
class of metric spaces, in that they satisfy relaxed versions of
the triangle inequality, as well as other spaces whose distance
properties do not fully satisfy the metric axioms.
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