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72 - Note on the Theory of Permutations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 October 2010

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Summary

It seems worth inquiring whether the distinction made use of in the theory of determinants, of the permutations of a series of things all of them different, into positive and negative permutations, can be made in the case of a series of things not all of them different. The ordinary rule is well known, viz. permutations are considered as positive or negative according as they are derived from the primitive arrangement by an even or an odd number of inversions (that is, interchanges of two things); and it is obvious that this rule fails when two or more of the series of things become identical, since in this case any given permutation can be derived indifferently by means of an even or an odd number of inversions. To state the rule in a different form, it will be convenient to enter into some preliminary explanations. Consider a series of n things, all of them different, and let abc … be the primitive arrangement; imagine a symbol such as {xyz) (u) (vw)… where x, y, &c., are the entire series of n things, and which symbol is to be considered as furnishing a rule by which a permutation is to be derived from the primitive arrangement abc… as follows, viz. the (xyz) of the symbol denotes that the letters x, y, z in the primitive arrangement abc … are to be interchanged x into y, y into z, z into x. The (u) of the symbol denotes that the letter u in the primitive arrangement abc … is to remain unaltered. The (vw) of the symbol denotes that the letters v, w in the primitive arrangement are to be interchanged v

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1889

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