Previously: Part 8. It’s the penultimate week of the course, and up until now we’ve abstained from using the axiom of choice. But this week we gorged on it.
Gerard Westendorp has a real knack for geometry, and here is his answer. Here is Thurston’s procedure. First draw the lattice of Eisenstein integers in the complex plane: ...
Projects range from applied category theory to logic, programming languages, and science, technology, and society. Specific topics for 2025 include, but are not limited to: Computational category ...
And the course feels like it’s mostly converging with any other set theory course, just with the special feature that everything remains resolutely isomorphism-invariant. This week we constructed N ...
Are you interested in using category-theoretic methods to tackle problems in topics like quantum computation, machine learning, numerical analysis or graph theory? Then you might like the Adjoint ...
Thurston’s paper Shapes of polyhedra and triangulations of the sphere is really remarkable. I’m writing about it in my next column for the Notices of the American Mathematical Society. Here’s a draft ...