Group Theory

Subgroups, quotients, Sylow theorems, solvability, and group actions.


foundation tier

Group Theory. Subgroups, quotients, Sylow theorems, solvability, and group actions. The literature on group theory divides naturally along several axes: the foundational structures that organise the subject, the techniques that drive proofs and computations, the questions about classification or representation that animate current research, and the bridges to neighbouring areas of mathematics and science. The references below trace those axes through the canonical textbook treatments and recent technical contributions.

Foundations and canonical references

The standard treatments of group theory approach the subject from complementary angles. Robinson, A Course in the Theory of Groups (1996) is the anchor reference for the subject and lays out the core definitions, theorems, and worked examples that practitioners return to. Rotman, An Introduction to the Theory of Groups (1995) gives a parallel, more proof-oriented exposition of the same material and is widely used as a graduate text. Dummit, Abstract Algebra (2003) offers an alternative presentation that complements the primary references and is useful for triangulating definitions and proof techniques.

Open methodological questions for group theory include sharpening the bridges between foundational theory and computational practice, extending classical results to broader or more structured settings, and integrating the techniques surveyed above with adjacent mathematical disciplines. The references listed in this page are the entry points that current work builds on.

Prerequisites

Sources

  • textbook · primary · 1996
    A Course in the Theory of Groups
    robinson-1996
  • textbook · primary · 1995
    An Introduction to the Theory of Groups
    rotman-1995
  • textbook · supporting · 2003
    Abstract Algebra
    dummit-2003

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