VI of Oregon lectures in 1962, Bass gave simplified proofs of a number
of "Morita Theorems", incorporating ideas of Chase and Schanuel. One of
the Morita theorems characterizes when there is an equivalence of
categories mod-A R:: ! mod-B for two rings A and B. Morita's solution
organizes ideas so efficiently that the classical Wedderburn-Artin
theorem is a simple consequence, and moreover, a similarity class [AJ
in the Brauer group Br(k) of Azumaya algebras over a commutative ring k
consists of all algebras B such that the corresponding categories mod-A
and mod-B consisting of k-linear morphisms are equivalent by a k-linear
functor. (For fields, Br(k) consists of similarity classes of simple
central algebras, and for arbitrary commutative k, this is subsumed
under the Azumaya [51]1 and Auslander-Goldman [60J Brauer group. )
Numerous other instances of a wedding of ring theory and category
(albeit a shot- gun wedding!) are contained in the text. Furthermore,
in. my attempt to further simplify proofs, notably to eliminate the need
for tensor products in Bass's exposition, I uncovered a vein of ideas
and new theorems lying wholely within ring theory. This constitutes much
of Chapter 4 -the Morita theorem is Theorem 4. 29-and the basis for it
is a corre- spondence theorem for projective modules (Theorem 4. 7)
suggested by the Morita context. As a by-product, this provides
foundation for a rather complete theory of simple Noetherian rings-but
more about this in the introduction.