Stone algebra

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, a Stone algebra or Stone lattice is a pseudocomplemented distributive lattice L in which any of the following equivalent statements hold for all [1]

  • ;
  • ;
  • .

They were introduced by Grätzer & Schmidt (1957) and named after Marshall Harvey Stone.

The set is called the skeleton of L. Then L is a Stone algebra if and only if its skeleton S(L) is a sublattice of L.[1]

Boolean algebras are Stone algebras, and Stone algebras are Ockham algebras.

Examples:

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b T.S. Blyth (2006). Lattices and Ordered Algebraic Structures. Springer Science & Business Media. Chapter 7. Pseudocomplementation; Stone and Heyting algebras. pp. 103–119. ISBN 978-1-84628-127-3.