The second fact is perhaps not very well known. It may even be hard to understand what it means. Though the octonions are nonassociative, for any nonzero octonion g g the map ...
Monads, like burritos, come in many different varieties. In computer science monads serve to streamline computational patterns such as exception handling and context management. We illustrate these ...
Here’s my third and final set of lecture notes for a 4 1 2 \frac{1}{2}-hour minicourse at the Summer School on Algebra at the Zografou campus of the National Technical University of Athens. Part 1 is ...
Despite the “2” in the title, you can follow this post without having read part 1. The whole point is to sneak up on the metricky, analysisy stuff about potential functions from a categorical angle, ...
In Part 1, I explained my hopes that classical statistical mechanics reduces to thermodynamics in the limit where Boltzmann’s constant k k approaches zero. In Part 2, I explained exactly what I mean ...
I keep wanting to understand Bernoulli numbers more deeply, and people keep telling me stuff that’s fancy when I want to understand things simply. But let me try again.
I’ve just arXived my notes for Edinburgh’s undergraduate Galois theory course, which I taught from 2021 to 2023. I first shared the notes on my website some time ago. But it took me a while to arXiv ...
When is it appropriate to completely reinvent the wheel? To an outsider, that seems to happen a lot in category theory, and probability theory isn’t spared from this treatment. We’ve had a useful ...
The study of monoidal categories and their applications is an essential part of the research and applications of category theory. However, on occasion the coherence conditions of these categories ...
Fibrations are a fundamental concept of category theory and categorical logic that have become increasingly relevant to the world of applied category theory thanks to their prominent use in ...
such that the following 5 5 diagrams commute: (for f: x 0 → x 1 f:x_0\to x_1 and y ∈ 풞 y\in\mathcal{C}, we write f ⊗ y f\otimes y to mean f ⊗ id y: x 0 ⊗ y → x 1 ⊗ y f\otimes\operatorname{id}_y: ...
Here is the statement as I understand it to be, framed as a bijection of sets. My chief reference is the wonderful book Elliptic Curves, Modular Forms and their L-Functions by Álvaro Lozano-Robledo ...
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