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Ah Love Could you and I with Him consl?ire To grasp this sorry
Scheme of things entIre' KHAYYAM People investigating algebraic
groups have studied the same objects in many different guises. My
first goal thus has been to take three different viewpoints and
demonstrate how they offer complementary intuitive insight into the
subject. In Part I we begin with a functorial idea, discussing some
familiar processes for constructing groups. These turn out to be
equivalent to the ring-theoretic objects called Hopf algebras, with
which we can then con struct new examples. Study of their
representations shows that they are closely related to groups of
matrices, and closed sets in matrix space give us a geometric
picture of some of the objects involved. This interplay of methods
continues as we turn to specific results. In Part II, a geometric
idea (connectedness) and one from classical matrix theory (Jordan
decomposition) blend with the study of separable algebras. In Part
III, a notion of differential prompted by the theory of Lie groups
is used to prove the absence of nilpotents in certain Hopf
algebras. The ring-theoretic work on faithful flatness in Part IV
turns out to give the true explanation for the behavior of quotient
group functors. Finally, the material is connected with other parts
of algebra in Part V, which shows how twisted forms of any
algebraic structure are governed by its automorphism group scheme."
Ah Love Could you and I with Him consl?ire To grasp this sorry
Scheme of things entIre' KHAYYAM People investigating algebraic
groups have studied the same objects in many different guises. My
first goal thus has been to take three different viewpoints and
demonstrate how they offer complementary intuitive insight into the
subject. In Part I we begin with a functorial idea, discussing some
familiar processes for constructing groups. These turn out to be
equivalent to the ring-theoretic objects called Hopf algebras, with
which we can then con struct new examples. Study of their
representations shows that they are closely related to groups of
matrices, and closed sets in matrix space give us a geometric
picture of some of the objects involved. This interplay of methods
continues as we turn to specific results. In Part II, a geometric
idea (connectedness) and one from classical matrix theory (Jordan
decomposition) blend with the study of separable algebras. In Part
III, a notion of differential prompted by the theory of Lie groups
is used to prove the absence of nilpotents in certain Hopf
algebras. The ring-theoretic work on faithful flatness in Part IV
turns out to give the true explanation for the behavior of quotient
group functors. Finally, the material is connected with other parts
of algebra in Part V, which shows how twisted forms of any
algebraic structure are governed by its automorphism group scheme."
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