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== Definition == A '''Boolean algebra''' is a [[Set (mathematics)|set]] {{math|1=''A''}}, equipped with two [[binary operation]]s {{math|1=β§}} (called "meet" or "and"), {{math|1=β¨}} (called "join" or "or"), a [[unary operation]] {{math|1=Β¬}} (called "complement" or "not") and two elements {{math|1=0}} and {{math|1=1}} in {{math|1=''A''}} (called "bottom" and "top", or "least" and "greatest" element, also denoted by the symbols {{math|1=β₯}} and {{math|1=β€}}, respectively), such that for all elements {{math|''a''}}, {{math|''b''}} and {{math|''c''}} of {{math|''A''}}, the following [[axiom]]s hold:{{sfn|Davey|Priestley|1990|pp=109, 131, 144}} :: {| cellpadding=5 |{{math|1=''a'' β¨ (''b'' β¨ ''c'') = (''a'' β¨ ''b'') β¨ ''c''}} |{{math|1=''a'' β§ (''b'' β§ ''c'') = (''a'' β§ ''b'') β§ ''c''}} | [[associativity]] |- |{{math|1=''a'' β¨ ''b'' = ''b'' β¨ ''a''}} |{{math|1=''a'' β§ ''b'' = ''b'' β§ ''a''}} | [[commutativity]] |- |{{math|1=''a'' β¨ (''a'' β§ ''b'') = ''a''}} |{{math|1=''a'' β§ (''a'' β¨ ''b'') = ''a''}} | [[Absorption law|absorption]] |- |{{math|1=''a'' β¨ 0 = ''a''}} |{{math|1=''a'' β§ 1 = ''a''}} | [[identity element|identity]] |- |{{math|1=''a'' β¨ (''b'' β§ ''c'') = (''a'' β¨ ''b'') β§ (''a'' β¨ ''c'') }} |{{math|1=''a'' β§ (''b'' β¨ ''c'') = (''a'' β§ ''b'') β¨ (''a'' β§ ''c'') }} | [[distributivity]] |- |{{math|1=''a'' β¨ Β¬''a'' = 1}} |{{math|1=''a'' β§ Β¬''a'' = 0}} | [[complemented lattice|complements]] |} Note, however, that the absorption law and even the associativity law can be excluded from the set of axioms as they can be derived from the other axioms (see [[#Axiomatics|Proven properties]]). A Boolean algebra with only one element is called a '''trivial Boolean algebra''' or a '''degenerate Boolean algebra'''. (In older works, some authors required {{math|0}} and {{math|1}} to be ''distinct'' elements in order to exclude this case.){{citation needed|date=July 2020}} It follows from the last three pairs of axioms above (identity, distributivity and complements), or from the absorption axiom, that : {{math|1=''a'' = ''b'' β§ ''a''}} if and only if {{math|1=''a'' β¨ ''b'' = ''b''}}. The relation {{math|β€}} defined by {{math|''a'' β€ ''b''}} if these equivalent conditions hold, is a [[partial order]] with least element 0 and greatest element 1. The meet {{math|1=''a'' β§ ''b''}} and the join {{math|1=''a'' β¨ ''b''}} of two elements coincide with their [[infimum]] and [[supremum]], respectively, with respect to β€. The first four pairs of axioms constitute a definition of a [[bounded lattice]]. It follows from the first five pairs of axioms that any complement is unique. The set of axioms is [[duality (order theory)|self-dual]] in the sense that if one exchanges {{math|1=β¨}} with {{math|1=β§}} and {{math|0}} with {{math|1}} in an axiom, the result is again an axiom. Therefore, by applying this operation to a Boolean algebra (or Boolean lattice), one obtains another Boolean algebra with the same elements; it is called its '''dual'''.{{sfn|Goodstein|2012|p=21ff}}
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