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Ockham algebra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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In mathematics, an Ockham algebra is a bounded distributive lattice with a dual endomorphism, that is, an operation satisfying

  • ,
  • ,
  • ,
  • .

They were introduced by Berman,[1] and were named after William of Ockham by Urquhart.[2] Ockham algebras form a variety.

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Examples

Examples of Ockham algebras include Boolean algebras, De Morgan algebras, Kleene algebras, and Stone algebras.

References

Further reading

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