it's pretty simple... we have many billions of people and the number is growing exponentially at an accelerated and unsustainable rate. — Lif3r
Remind me of the defs. A section is a right inverse as I understand it. There can be a lot of right inverses to a function, you just keep choosing different elements in the preimages of points. Is that the bundle?
— fishfry
Yes. — Mephist
Where does measure theory (surely not taught in high school) intersect any of this? I've used it in various integration processes, the most interesting being functional integration. And Feynman constructed his sum of paths integral in more or less that concept. — jgill
No, I like "normal" mathematics: no computers involved. But having a theorem-prover as Coq to be able to verify if you can really write a proof of what you think is provable is very helpful. — Mephist
Yes. — Mephist
Yes! I should have added a formal definition, but I have an aversion to writing symbols on this site :confused: I added a link with a clear picture, I think. — Mephist
So, there is a main ingredient that is missing: points! Topos theory is a formulation of set theory where sets are not "built" starting from points. Sets (the objects of the category) and functions (the morphisms of the category) are considered as "primitive" concepts. The points are a "secondary" construction. — Mephist
OK, I'll stop here for the moment, because I am a little afraid of the answer "that's all bullshit, I'll not read the rest of it..." — Mephist
OK, never mind. Sorry for continuing to repeat the same things! — Mephist
A sheaf is a topos at the same way as a set is a topos: it's the "trick" of the Yoneda embedding! :smile: do you understand now? (sorry: bad example.. let's say that a sheaf can make everything - more or less - "become" a topos) — Mephist
A sheaf S over a topological space X is a "fiber bundle", where the fibers over a point x in X are disjoint subspaces of S. Now, a section of the fiber bundle (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Section_(fiber_bundle)) is what in type theory is called a "dependently typed function", that from the point of view of logic is interpreted as the proof of a proposition with a free variable x: the fiber bundle is the proposition (that depends on x) and a section of that fiber bundle is a proof of that proposition. — Mephist
it's the formulation of set theory in terms of objects, arrows, and universal-mapping properties. — Mephist
Yeah, I see. We come back to the same issue. Tarski was a great logician but also a great algebraic geometrist. Some people have already tried to explain to me why it is apparently one and the same thing, but that hasn't registered with me already. I still fail to see the "obvious" link between both. — alcontali
But I can give you the reference to a very good book (in my opinion) on this subject that is easy to understand for somebody that has some basis of category theory:
- Title: "TOPOI THE CATEGORIAL ANALYSIS OF LOGIC"
- Autor: Robert Goldblatt — Mephist
I think I'm missing more than a "few" molecules but that's beside the point. What I want to know is whether the distance AB is the same as the distance BA where A and B are the same points. — TheMadFool
If the past stretches to negative infinity from the present wouldn't that mean the universe would've to experience positive infinity to reach the present? — TheMadFool
If B = past and A = the present then the time AB = negative infinity and the time BA = positive infinity. — TheMadFool
If you agree with me so far — TheMadFool
and I see no reason to not do so then that would mean a positive infinity of time should've elapsed to reach the present i.e. a completed infinity is require and we know that completed infinity is an oxymoron or, to be explicit, a blatant contradiction. However, I keep an open mind about this: there are more things in heaven and on earth than can be dreamed up in your philosophy — TheMadFool
It is not only from celebrity physicists that philosophy gets a bashing. Philosophers themselves also appear very critical of philosophy, which seems to be self-contradictory, but is it really? — Pussycat
We are talking about the origin of everything; IE huge amounts of matter; IE a macro, not micro problem. In the macro world the cause always comes before and determines the effect. — Devans99
A. Assume an infinite causal regress exists
B. Then it has no first element
C. If it has no nth element, it has no nth+1 element
D. So it cannot exist — Devans99
I'm surprised at this attitude, although it continues to surprise me how little concern there is for climate change in the members of the forum from the US. Is it a partisan stance perhaps, I recollect Trump's insistence that climate change is a Chinese plot, a deception to persuade the west to ruin its economies and competitiveness. — Punshhh
If we represent xy=1 as a predicate function γ(x,y)γ(x,y) which is true when xy=1 and false otherwise, then we get a model-theoretical model with logical sentences that are true or false about (x,y) tuples. — alcontali
OK, I'll try to explain this point.
The fact that there is a relation between topology and logic (mediated by category theory) was well known even before, you are right. But Voevodsky's "homotopy type theory" (https://homotopytypetheory.org/) does not say simply that there is a relation between topology and logic: it says that "homotopy theory" (that is a branch of topology) ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Homotopy_theory ) and Martin-Lof intuitionistic type theory with the addition of a particular axiom (the univalence axiom - https://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/univalence+axiom) ARE EXACTLY THE SAME THING (the same theory). Meaning: there is this axiomatic theory that speaks about homotopy between topological spaces, expressed in the language of category theory (and then in ZFC set theory - it is still valid in any topos, but I don't want to make it too complicated). So, the terms of the language are spaces, points, paths connecting points, equivalence classes between these paths etc...
Now, if you take whatever theorem from homotopy theory and RENAME all the terms of this theory, substituting the word "types" to the word "spaces", "proofs" to the word "points", "equalities" to the word "paths", etc... (lots of details omitted, of course), you obtain a theorem in type theory. And if you take any theorem in type theory you can reinterpret it as a theorem about topology. — Mephist
Thanks for saving me the effort of looking it up. That one sentence is enough for me. — jgill
Infinity is not a number and even if it is 1/(-/+infinity) will always be a non-zero value for the simple reason that there's no number that satisfies the equation 1/x = 0. Dividing by larger and larger x values will result in 1/x approaching zero as a limit but it'll never be the case that 1/x = 0. — TheMadFool
It is true that they can be very abstract objects in mathematics, but for a data-science person a sheave is mostly a data-correlation tool. A sheave can represent a cellular-phone network and relate each cell of the covered area with the set of users that are connected to that cell. — Mephist
If I travel from Istanbul to New York by plane the distance is 8,065 km. If I return from New York to Istanbul, again by plane and on the same route the distance will again be 8,065 km right? — TheMadFool
I was simply pointing out that, taken as a function, f(x) = 1/x, we can see that just because f(a) = f(b), it doesn't imply that a = b. — TheMadFool
As a relationship, and you told me about it in another thread, it's a case of injection where both f(+infinity) and f(-infinity) give the same result 0. — TheMadFool
I take this to mean that the end behavior of f(x) = 1/x is very much like g(x) = x^2 in which (-a)^2 = (+a)^2 but -a not= +a. — TheMadFool
Yet, simple algebra does show that if 1/x = 1/y then x = y. — TheMadFool
The function f(x) = 1/x doesn't involve squaring but we do multiply by the product xy which is (-infinity)(+infinity). Is this where the problem occurs? — TheMadFool
The correspondence between topology and logic instead, that's one of the most popular and ideas of today's mathematics! — Mephist
The wager isn't a logic flaw. If one could form a belief by flipping a switch, it would make sense for anyone who thinks there's at least a small chance of a god who rewards us after death for believing in him. Switching to believer costs you nothing, and it at least has that small chance of benefitting you. So the problem is that beliefs don't work that way. — Relativist
and more importantly how and when to not populate) responsibly — Lif3r
and even Martin-Löf type theory has a lot of variants (too many to be something important, right? :smile: ) — Mephist
But I think that now the picture is becoming quite clear (even thanks to Voevodsky's work): — Mephist
there is a very strict correspondence between topology and logic. — Mephist
But you have to "extend" the notion of topology to the one of topoi (a category with some additional properties). ZFC is the logic corresponding to the standard topology (where lines are made of uncountable sets of points). But ZFC and the "standard" topology are not at all the only logically sound possibility! (that in a VERY short summary) — Mephist
Yes but mathematics needs computations for proofs, and computations are physical processes. — Mephist
In other words we have a single output for two inputs that are the very name of being poles apart. — TheMadFool
When one considers the function ... — TheMadFool
P.S. Here's a citation taken from wikipedia: — Mephist
I don't know what would be the equivalent limitation to Turing machines that corresponds to dependently typed lambda calculus (if there is one). So, I should have said that we can assume that the "original" (non limited) Turing machine does not exist — Mephist
if we travel from our past which is negative infinity to the present, point 0 on the integer number line, then we would have to traverse a positive infinity of time to reach the present, point 0 on the integer number line. However, positive infinity is, by definition, an interminable quantity and a task that cannot be completed. — TheMadFool
Is infinity a Western Concept? I wasn't aware of that? Anyway...here's a simple argument: — TheMadFool
You are failing completely to understand the dynamics of causal regresses. I have given you examples that I child could follow. I am almost at a loss. — Devans99
But what I am saying is that you can equally well assume as an axiom (that would be incompatible with ZFC) that Turing machines DO NOT exist! — Mephist
Constructivist theories correspond to elegant constructions in topology, represented as internal languages of certain categories. In comparison, ZFC axioms seem to be much more arbitrary, from my point of view. — Mephist
If a computation is too long to be performed by any computer even in principle, is it still valid? — Mephist
