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Consortium for Mathematics and its Applications

Product ID: On Jargon
Supplementary Print
Undergraduate

Modern Algebra : Time for Change

Author: Walter Meyer


Introduction

So what is modern about Modern Algebra anyhow? It is an old subject, to be sure, and calling it "modern" in the sense of "recent" is a misnomer. The first conception of an abstract group-a set of elements whose natures were completely unspecified but which operated on one another according to a multiplication table that often came out of the blue-goes back to Cayley [1854].

The early date of Cayley's work makes clear that, when your Modern Algebra course was created and named (around the middle of the 20th century in the case of many colleges), the idea of it being modern in the sense of recent was not true even then. However, there was a different sense in which the adjective was reasonable. (And, after all, something was needed to distinguish it from College Algebra, which dealt only with the real and complex numbers.) By now, however, even that further justification is less persuasive than it once was. Mystifying right? OK, so let's fill in a little context.

©2017 by COMAP, Inc.
The UMAP Journal 38.1
6 pages

Mathematics Topics:

Algebra

Application Areas:

College Algebra

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