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Commutative magma

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ilmari Karonen (talk | contribs) at 14:43, 6 August 2007 (A commutative non-associative magma: as pretty as the former version looked, I think putting this on two lines is likely to make it easier to parse). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In mathematics, it can be shown that there exist magmas that are commutative but not associative. A simple example of such a magma is given by considering the children's game of rock, paper, scissors.

A commutative non-associative magma

Let and consider the binary operation defined as follows:

"paper beats rock";
"scissors beat paper";
"rock beats scissors";
"rock ties with rock";
"paper ties with paper";
"scissors tie with scissors".

By defintion, the magma is commutative, but it is non-associative, as the following shows:

A commutative non-associative algebra

Using the above example, one can construct a commutative non-associative algebra over a field : take to be the three-dimensional vector space over whose elements are written in the form

,

for . Vector addition and scalar multiplication are defined component-wise, and vectors are multiplied using the above rules for multiplying the elements and . The set

i.e.

forms a basis for the algebra . As before, vector multiplication in is commutative, but not associative.