General Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 February 2010
Summary
This book has been written with the intention of providing an introduction to algebraic topology as it is practised today. The reader is not supposed at the outset to possess any knowledge of algebraic topology; indeed, even the reader with no knowledge of analytic topology or abstract algebra is provided, in the Background to Part I, with a synopsis of the facts that are taken for granted in the text. The treatment throughout has been subject to the consideration that, if the book is to serve its purpose, it must provide an account of the basic notions of algebraic topology intelligible to the mathematician inexperienced in the techniques and problems described. However, though the treatment is elementary, we have been more ambitious in our choice of material than is customary in elementary textbooks. It appears to us that the literature is rich in advanced textbooks and adequate in elementary introductory textbooks, but that the two types of book are not very effectively linked. Again, the advanced textbooks themselves fall into two classes which may broadly be described as classical and modern and the rapid shifts of emphasis which the subject has experienced make it difficult always to recognize classical arguments in their modern dress. We have tried to provide the links which we believe the student might find difficulty in providing for himself from a study of the available literature.
Thus, while our beginning is quite elementary, we have been able, by omitting certain topics, particularly those treated canonically in classical works, to reach in later chapters the parts of the subjects which lie in the immediate foreground of present-day research. The book is divided into two parts.
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- Homology TheoryAn Introduction to Algebraic Topology, pp. ix - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1960