Imaginary groups: lazy monoids and reversible computation

2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 1002-1031 ◽  
Author(s):  
MURDOCH J. GABBAY ◽  
PETER H. KROPHOLLER

We use constructions in monoid and group theory to exhibit an adjunction between the category of partially ordered monoids and lazy monoid homomorphisms and the category of partially ordered groups and group homomorphisms such that the unit of the adjunction is injective. We also prove a similar result for sets acted on by monoids and groups.We introduce the new notion of a lazy homomorphism for a function f between partially ordered monoids such that f(m ○ m′) ≤ f(m) ○ f(m′).Every monoid can be endowed with the discrete partial ordering (m ≤ m′ if and only if m=m′), so our constructions provide a way of embedding monoids into groups. A simple counterexample (the two-element monoid with a non-trivial idempotent) and some calculations show that one can never hope for such an embedding to be a monoid homomorphism, so the price paid for injecting a monoid into a group is that we must weaken the notion of a homomorphism to this new notion of a lazy homomorphism.The computational significance of this is that a monoid is an abstract model of computation – or at least of ‘operations’ – and, similarly, a group models reversible computations/operations. With this reading, the adjunction with its injective unit gives a systematic high-level way of faithfully translating an irreversible system into a ‘lazy’ reversible one.Informally, but perhaps informatively, we can describe this work as follows: we give an abstract analysis of how we can sensibly add ‘undo’ (in the sense of ‘control-Z’).

2010 ◽  
Vol 40 (5) ◽  
pp. 1527-1578
Author(s):  
Matthew Horak ◽  
Melanie Stein

1976 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 186-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. W. Glass

N. R. Reilly has obtained an algebraic characterization of the compatible tight Riesz orders that can be supported by certain partially ordered groups [13; 14]. The purpose of this paper is to give a “geometric“ characterization by the use of ordered permutation groups. Our restrictions on the partially ordered groups will likewise be geometric rather than algebraic. Davis and Bolz [3] have done some work on groups of all order-preserving permutations of a totally ordered field; from our more general theorems, we will be able to recapture their results.


1973 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 239-246
Author(s):  
Andrew Wirth

AbstractRelative uniform limits need not be unique in a non-archimedean partially ordered group, and order convergence need not imply metric convergence in a Banach lattice. We define a new type of convergence on partially ordered groups (R-convergence), which implies both the previous ones, and does not have these defects. Further R-convergence is equivalent to relative uniform convergence on divisible directed integrally closed partially ordered groups, and to order convergence on fully ordered groups.


1994 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Collen L. Johnson

The unprecedented prolongation of life in the United States has been accompanied by increased numbers of disabled people in their 80s and 90s, who have high needs for health care and social services. The paper reports longitudinal findings on 150 individuals, 85 years and older. Over three years, their functioning on activities of daily living significantly declined at the same time that they continued to described their health as good and to report contentment about their life. Families were active in sustaining community living of the oldest old, but those most at risk of institutionalization were the childless. Over time, 48% of the survivors stayed functionally fit, while 28% became increasingly disabled and dependent and 24% remained stable at a high level of disability. The means by which the oldest old coped with their disabilities include practical steps in simplifying their environment and narrowing their social world. They also used cognitive regulation by modifying their health beliefs and delimiting those areas over which they could exert a sense of control.


1983 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 353-372 ◽  
Author(s):  
Panaiotis K. Pavlakos

M. Sion and T. Traynor investigated ([15]-[17]), measures and integrals having values in topological groups or semigroups. Their definition of integrability was a modification of Phillips-Rickart bilinear vector integrals, in locally convex topological vector spaces.The purpose of this paper is to develop a good notion of an integration process in partially ordered groups, based on their order structure. The results obtained generalize some of the results of J. D. M. Wright ([19]-[22]) where the measurable functions are real-valued and the measures take values in partially ordered vector spaces.Let if be a σ-algebra of subsets of T, X a lattice group, Y, Z partially ordered groups and m : H → F a F-valued measure on H. By F(T, X), M(T, X), E(T, X) and S(T, X) are denoted the lattice group of functions with domain T and with range X, the lattice group of (H, m)-measurable functions of F(T, X) and the lattice group of (H, m)-elementary measurable functions of F(T, X) and the lattice group of (H, m)-simple measurable functions of F(T, X) respectively.


1975 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-73 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. F. Sherman

This paper concerns the completions of partially ordered groups introduced by Fuchs (1965a) and the author (to appear); the p.o. groups under consideration are, generally, abelian tight Riesz groups, and so, throughout, the word “group” will refer to an abelian group.In section 3 we meet the cornerstone of the work, the central product theorem, by means of which we can interpret the Cauchy completion of a tight Riesz group in terms of the completion of any of its o-ideals; one particularly important case arises when the group has a minimal o-ideal. Such a minimal o-ideal is o-simple, and in section 6 the completion of an isolated o-simple tight Riesz group is shown to be a tight Riesz real vector space.


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