Monotone clones and the varieties they determine (Q810555): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 07:06, 10 February 2024
scientific article
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English | Monotone clones and the varieties they determine |
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Monotone clones and the varieties they determine (English)
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1990
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A clone C on a set P is a family of finitary functions which contains the projections and is closed under composition. A clone C is called monotone if there is some order \(\leq\) on P such that C is the set of all finitary order-preserving functions with respect to this order. A finite nontrivial algebra P is said to be order-primal if the clone of finitary functions on P is monotone. It is proved that the variety generated by an order-primal algebra is congruence-distributive iff it contains at most two non-isomorphic subdirectly irreducible algebras (Theorem 1.7). Further, part (ii) of Theorem 3.3 states that if the prevarieties generated by order-primal algebras P and Q are equivalent as categories then the corresponding ordered sets or their duals generate that same order variety. The authors also show that every finite bounded ordered set of length 3 has a 5-ary order-preserving near unanimity function (see Theorem 4.4).
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monotone clone
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congruence-distributive variety
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category equivalence
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order-primal algebra
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near unanimity function
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