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.
Hello unknown@40.77.167.64. So nice of you to stop by. I'm a member of the Theory Group here at UT. I've been at UT since September 1994. Before coming here, I was an Assistant Professor in the theory ...
Earlier this month the Mathematics Institute at Uppsala University hosted a conference called Categorification in Algebra and Topology, clearly a theme close to our collective heart. As yet there are ...
Thurston gave a concrete procedure to construct triangulations of the 2-sphere where 5 or 6 triangles meet at each vertex. How can you get the icosahedron using this procedure? Gerard Westendorp has a ...
Previously: Part 5. Next: Part 7. A category theorist might imagine that a chapter with this title would be about constructing colimits, and they’d be half right.
Previously: Part 6. Next: Part 8. As the course continues, the axioms fade into the background. They rarely get mentioned these days. Much more often, the facts we’re leaning on are theorems that were ...
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 ...
I haven’t been carefully following quantum field theory these days, but some folks on the Category Theory Community Server asked me what I thought about recent work using the ‘amplitudohedron’ and ...