In his work on rings of operators in Hilbert space, John von Neumann
discovered a new mathematical structure that resembled the lattice
system Ln. In characterizing its properties, von Neumann founded the
field of continuous geometry.This book, based on von Neumann's lecture
notes, begins with the development of the axioms of continuous geometry,
dimension theory, and--for the irreducible case--the function D(a). The
properties of regular rings are then discussed, and a variety of results
are presented for lattices that are continuous geometries, for which
irreducibility is not assumed. For students and researchers interested
in ring theory or projective geometries, this book is required
reading."This historic book should be in the hands of everyone
interested in rings and projective geometry."--R. J. Smith, The
Australian Journal of Science"Much in this book is still of great value,
partly because it cannot be found elsewhere ... partly because of the
very clear and comprehensible presentation. This makes the book valuable
for a first study of continuous geometry as well as for research in this
field."--F. D. Veldkamp, Nieuw Archief voor Wiskunde