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L’Algèbre de Serge Lang est l’un des plus célèbres traités d’algèbre de ces dernières années. Sa rédaction a été régulièrement reprise, étendue et enrichie par l’auteur, de nouvelles pages inédites faisant notamment leur apparition dans cette traduction en langue française.
Ouvert sur les recherches actuelles, l’ouvrage est écrit dans un style élégant et précis. Partant des définitions de base, Serge Lang aborde l’ensemble des domaines fondamentaux de l’algèbre d’aujourd’hui : théorie de Galois, modules et anneaux, algèbre linéaire et multilinéaire, représentations des groupes, algèbre homologique, théorie des catégories, etc. À la fin de chaque chapitre, de très nombreux exercices complètent et illustrent le cours.
L’ouvrage est destiné à un vaste public : les étudiants en 2e cycle / Master pourront s’y initier aux notions de base essentielles de l’algèbre moderne ; les chercheurs débutants ou confirmés pourront y trouver des présentations très riches des domaines de l’algèbre qu’ils seront amenés, un jour ou l’autre, à étudier.

944 pages, Hardcover

First published December 1, 1965

32 people are currently reading
520 people want to read

About the author

Serge Lang

184 books57 followers
Serge Lang was an influential mathematician in the field of number theory. Algebra is his most famous book.

Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name. See this thread for more information.

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5 stars
106 (49%)
4 stars
56 (26%)
3 stars
28 (13%)
2 stars
15 (7%)
1 star
9 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Kat.
38 reviews1 follower
October 20, 2009
Not exactly a light read. Very heavy book, good for hitting people with.
Profile Image for Woflmao.
145 reviews16 followers
March 10, 2014
This is the kind of book which people love who already know everything that's in it (and then they pretend this is the way they would have liked to learn it).
Lang's "Algebra" is a sterilised accumulation of algebraic facts, and it makes a good algebra encyclopaedia.
To its credit, the book does cover a lot of material which one would otherwise have to look for in many different books, and I assume this is the main reason for its fame.
Unfortunately, the exposition follows the Bourbaki ideology, so it is practically useless as a textbook to learn from.
Profile Image for J C.
84 reviews32 followers
Currently reading
November 27, 2015
I'm reading this book in conjunction with an online lecture series on abstract algebra by Benedict Gross, a Harvard professor who was once the dean of Harvard undergraduate programme and then the dean of Harvard College. So I feel in safe hands, especially when this book looks as intimidating as it really is. Someone here mentioned that it was 'good for hitting people with' and I agree wholeheartedly, this is a real brick, at 900 pages, and a very unusual one at that, as bricks to my knowledge are usually of a red, earthy colour, whereas this one is yellow. I suppose this is an allusion to the fact that mathematics isn't really of this earth... (unlike what Tegmark claims...)

In any case, I'm learning abstract alg because I need to know what rings, ideals, and polynomials of multiple variables are (and how they behave) as these seem to be the main objects of study in algebraic geometry.
22 reviews5 followers
December 26, 2008
I commend the reader who is able to get past the first chapter. While the book certainly contains a lot of information, it is presented in the most concise possible way (which sometimes can be an advantage, but often makes the proofs impossible to comprehend). The homework problems are challenging and time consuming. Most of them involve extending the (more basic) concepts presented in the text to deeper levels of abstraction. Therefore, I would recommend using this book for its exercises while having perhaps another algebra book to actually learn the subject (Hungerford's book is excellent).
1 review
October 17, 2019
I love Lang's Algebra, and fully understand that this makes me a minority, even in the algebra community. It's amazing as a reference, the exercises range from perfunctory to really hard (some of them reach far beyond the text, and include citations of research papers), and it's relatively readable, if a bit formulaic at times. To me this indicates an intent to expose the reader to both the fundamentals and some beautiful math.
Profile Image for Cyrus.
22 reviews3 followers
April 25, 2007
The very reason that I don't like it is my lack of understanding. Of course Lange did a great job, but not for this low level of sophistication!
Profile Image for Kiyoshi Takeuchi.
8 reviews1 follower
July 4, 2024
The chapters on field and Galois theory are what distinguish this book from others.
Profile Image for Jingyuan.
4 reviews1 follower
April 17, 2025
good but hard to understand text, syntax and notation is a bit weird for modern standards.
Profile Image for dead letter office.
825 reviews42 followers
April 17, 2008
i believe lang's purpose in writing this book was to emphasize his superiority to mathematics graduate students. mission accomplished. read it if you already know everything in it, or if you enjoy hieroglyphics.
18 reviews2 followers
October 28, 2008
as far as Lang goes, it's not bad, that is to say, this book would be horrible to learn from but as a reference, it's pretty decent.
Profile Image for sqrt2.
69 reviews47 followers
June 10, 2014
good stuff, i didn't read it like a novel though, i just used as a reference book, i enjoyed it
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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