November 25, 2013
Kan Extension Seminar applications
Posted by Emily Riehl
A friendly reminder: applications for the Kan Extension Seminar are due at the end of the week. More information can be found in the initial announcement and on the seminar website.
For those who don’t enroll, watch this space. You’ll be hearing from us again soon after the new year.
November 21, 2013
The 8th Scottish Category Theory Seminar
Posted by Tom Leinster
ScotCats 8 will take place in Edinburgh next Friday, 29 November, with an all-star programme featuring one of your -Café hosts:
- Urs Schreiber (Nijmegen), Higher toposes of laws of motion
- Vincent Danos (Edinburgh), Conditional expectation as a functor
- Ross Duncan (Strathclyde), Quantum computing in (almost) any category: an introduction to the ZX-calculus
- Bart Jacobs (Nijmegen), Program semantics, according to Heisenberg and to Schroedinger
I’m particularly looking forward to this one: it promises to be an excellent afternoon of talks.
The seminar web page has practical details. Thanks to the Glasgow Mathematical Journal Trust and the Scottish Informatics and Computer Science Alliance for funding.
November 19, 2013
The Covariance of Coloured Balls
Posted by David Corfield
When you reach over 150 messages in response to a post, it’s probably time to start a new one, especially for those with inefficient browsers. In this post I want to see if I can make sense of discussions we were having there about general relativity, covariance, groupoids and sameness in a much more intuitively clear setting, though perhaps it will introduce its own problems.
OK, so say I have a set, , of 5 indiscernible balls in a box, each of which can be coloured in 3 ways. Then I might take the state space to be , of cardinality 243. But perhaps while doing physics on these balls, I come to see that nothing about them matters aside from their colour. Since I can’t tell the difference between any two versions of 2 reds, 2 greens and a blue, I decide to reduce my state space to , a set of equivalence classes of cardinality 21.
However, after a time this starts to strike me as odd. I have represented the fact that any colouring of 2 reds, 2 greens and a blue are equal, and yet were someone to swap a green and a red I’d notice in a way that I wouldn’t notice a swap of two reds. Any swaps in a state of 5 red balls would also go unnoticed. At the very least, there seems to be a difference between a monochrome state and a tricoloured state.
November 18, 2013
Categories for the Working Philosopher
Posted by John Baez
Elaine Landry, in the philosophy department at U. C. Davis, is putting together a book called Categories for the Working Philosopher.
November 12, 2013
Four New Talks
Posted by Tom Leinster
In October I did little but talk. Five talks in five locations in 23 days, with only one duplicate among them, left me heartily wishing not to hear my own voice for a while.
Having gone to the effort of making slides, I might as well share them publicly. All the talks are on topics that have come up on the Café before. Here they are:
Unexpected connections This was a quickie for students beginning math PhDs at Scottish universities. I was trying to inspire them with the joys of a broad education. (Beforehand, I asked for your help on what to say.)
The mathematics of biodiversity This was a public lecture — my first ever. It was held under the banner of Mathematics of Planet Earth 2013.
The eventual image This grew directly out of a couple of posts here at the Café. I still have the feeling that I haven’t got to the heart of the matter.
The many faces of magnitude A subject I’ve written about extensively here, all parcelled up for a couple of colloquia.
November 10, 2013
Severing Ties with the NSA
Posted by Tom Leinster
Updated on 11 Dec 2013: see end of post.
A letter from Chicago mathematician Sasha Beilinson in this month’s Notices of the American Mathematical Society calls for the AMS to sever all ties with the US National Security Agency, citing
the vast secret spying programs of the NSA that wildly exceed anything conspiracy theorists could imagine.
He lists some of the ways in which the AMS and NSA support each other, and issues a call for action:
What should be done is a question not only for US citizens but also for people all over the world: the NSA destroyed the security of the Internet and privacy of communications for the whole planet. But if any healing is possible, it would probably start with making the NSA and its ilk socially unacceptable — just as, in the days of my youth, working for the KGB was socially unacceptable for many in the Soviet Union.