just did the first two on my friend's ipad yesterday. will continue after i finish my analysis assignment
― flopson, Saturday, 18 January 2014 18:28 (twelve years ago)
Euler did u write the review i was linking excerpts from above?
― flopson, Saturday, 18 January 2014 21:03 (twelve years ago)
that one's not mine, but I know the author very well
― Euler, Saturday, 18 January 2014 21:19 (twelve years ago)
corfield took the one you quoted pretty hard though
he was cooler with mine though I think mine's deeper
― Euler, Saturday, 18 January 2014 21:21 (twelve years ago)
hard to think of something more pretentious than philosophers talking about category theory
spoken like a person who has never heard category theorists talking about philosophy
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 18 January 2014 21:56 (twelve years ago)
thanks for the pointers to the reviews, but they made me want to read corfield more, since i get the sense i'm more sympathetic to the sort of approach he advocates. i've definitely read some mclarty i really like, and have been v. taken by his historical exposition.
any thoughts of/knowledge of john bell btw? i enjoyed his primer on infinitesimal analysis.
― lollercoaster of rove (s.clover), Sunday, 19 January 2014 04:36 (twelve years ago)
also heard him give a good talk, less of a picture of his work, but people who are down with robinson seem good?
― j., Sunday, 19 January 2014 04:39 (twelve years ago)
the problem with david's approach in the book is that it's too shallow; he just threw quotes out there and expects them to do the philosophical lifting
colin & ken have gone much deeper, but yes, not so much published; and colin is a partisan for cat theory and partisanship of that kind isn't becoming a philosopher
this convo is so weird to me, I come here to talk about rem bootlegs & then there are people talking about my people
― Euler, Sunday, 19 January 2014 21:23 (twelve years ago)
what makes you think there's no isomorphism there
― j., Sunday, 19 January 2014 21:28 (twelve years ago)
april 10 1981 -> the euclidean diagram
― Euler, Sunday, 19 January 2014 21:29 (twelve years ago)
terry tao making some interesting points tangential to the whole summing an infinite series debacle https://plus.google.com/114134834346472219368/posts/ZuJDv3daT9n
― lollercoaster of rove (s.clover), Sunday, 19 January 2014 22:33 (twelve years ago)
"colin is a partisan for cat theory and partisanship of that kind isn't becoming a philosopher"
I'm curious about this statement in a number of ways.
A) how is he a partisan for cat theory? partisan in what fashion? to whom? against what?B) why is partisanship unbecoming for a philosopher? since when? what sorts of partisanship are and are not acceptable? does it depend who you are partisan to, or about what topics?
more generally, i'm not quite sure what constitutes "philosophical lifting"? like what is "deep" philosophy vs not?
i can read mclarty as basically intellectual history with a strong grasp of the concepts under consideration and related debates. in what sense is this or is this not "philosophy"?
― lollercoaster of rove (s.clover), Sunday, 19 January 2014 22:37 (twelve years ago)
intellectual history is important, but ≠ philosophy. philosophy seeks to understand values; in the case of mathematics, mathematical values. you need to do history to bring those values forward, because mathematical practice expresses those values; but describing that history isn't enough
colin is a philosopher though, but rarely in print
yes, being rah rah for category theory isn't philosophical; but articulating what values category-theoretic methods realize could be philosophical. the former ≠ the latter
― Euler, Sunday, 19 January 2014 23:02 (twelve years ago)
lol at the idea that sterl is going to accept that intellectual historians do not seek to understand values
― j., Sunday, 19 January 2014 23:10 (twelve years ago)
describe values, sure, but that leaves the understanding to us. need furthur
― Euler, Sunday, 19 January 2014 23:30 (twelve years ago)
still i lol, but then in my experience 'intellectual history' is a label used by boundary-policing philosophers to keep fantasy-land sacrosanct and pure
― j., Sunday, 19 January 2014 23:55 (twelve years ago)
fantasyland rules, though rip mr toad's wild ride
― Euler, Monday, 20 January 2014 00:01 (twelve years ago)
THERE'S NO PHILOSOPHY IN THE MATH THREAD!
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 20 January 2014 03:08 (twelve years ago)
^^ boundary-policing
― lollercoaster of rove (s.clover), Monday, 20 January 2014 03:23 (twelve years ago)
I liked Terry's post on 1+2+3+4+5+.... by the way
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 20 January 2014 03:36 (twelve years ago)
if you don't do your own philosophy they're just going to take it away from you
― j., Monday, 20 January 2014 03:54 (twelve years ago)
good understanding of statistics, no understanding of literature
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/roots-of-unity/2014/01/27/rosencrantz-and-guildenstern-flip-coins/
― lollercoaster of rove (s.clover), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 02:21 (twelve years ago)
not very good at paying attention during plays either, show some class
― j., Tuesday, 28 January 2014 02:29 (twelve years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vsvy8Ko2-YM
― eric banana (s.clover), Sunday, 9 February 2014 19:44 (twelve years ago)
http://users-cs.au.dk/danvy/the-ideal-mathematician.pdf
― eric banana (s.clover), Sunday, 9 February 2014 19:45 (twelve years ago)
that rang totally hollow for me for some reason maybe because i am a pure math snob?
How could we as mathematicians prove to a skeptical outsider that our theorems have meaning in the world outside our own fraternity?
why does it matter if they do? most mathematicians pursue math for little monetary award or prestige and they do it for the love of it. and the comparison to scientology in the next paragraph, ffs -_-
― flopson, Sunday, 9 February 2014 22:30 (twelve years ago)
i skipped a large part of that though so maybe that qn was answered, can u sum it up for me sterl?
if mathematicians need to get better at explaining Why it is important to study fucked up geometric spaces that don't make any sense in order to get funding, then yeah whatever it takes to keep letting them do that. but like, idk in terms of beauty + ingenuity it's one of the greatest human achievements AND a lot of that weirdo shit ended up explaining all of 20th c physics (and now physics like quantum field theory is just math out the wazoo so there ARE "applications" in terms of understanding the universe) so like just trust them to keep doing cool shit u know?
― flopson, Sunday, 9 February 2014 22:35 (twelve years ago)
a lot of this jsut seems like Why It's Sad and Lonely To Be A Mathematician
He finds it diffcult to establish meaningful conversation with that large portion of humanity that has never heard of a non-Riemannian hypersquare. This creates grave diffculties for him; there are two col- leagues in his department, who know something about non-Riemannian hypersquares, but one of them is on sabbatical, and the other is much more interested in non-Eulerian semirings. He goes to conferences, and on summer visits to colleagues, to meet people who talk his language, who can appreciate his work and whose recognition, approval, and ad- miration are the only meaningful rewards he can ever hope for.
― flopson, Sunday, 9 February 2014 22:52 (twelve years ago)
the thing about the writing being undecipherable outside of the community it addresses is interesting. my favourite prof talks a lot about it, how, when you're writing something that will be read by your peers, there's a common base of not just knowledge and terminology that you can assume, but also a familiarity with the same methods, similarly to how you might say "by induction on n" or "by a diagonalization argument," just more convoluted and specific. its true that it would be a shame if the meaning of those papers were lost to future generations, but is that really the case?
― flopson, Sunday, 9 February 2014 22:56 (twelve years ago)
ok read the whole thing
― flopson, Sunday, 9 February 2014 23:07 (twelve years ago)
is it such a big deal that a vast amount of research math is undecipherable to those outside the hyper-specific community when the amount of math written in an accessible way is more than any average person would ever want to read if they lived to be a million years old?
― flopson, Sunday, 9 February 2014 23:10 (twelve years ago)
lol which is like, one book of it, if that
― j., Sunday, 9 February 2014 23:11 (twelve years ago)
yeah, like given the demand for accessible math expo mathematicians have been more forthcoming w/ exposition than is required
― flopson, Sunday, 9 February 2014 23:13 (twelve years ago)
that just shows how concerned they are for our true well-being, rather than with our ignorant conceptions of it
― j., Sunday, 9 February 2014 23:16 (twelve years ago)
heh
i know it's written by mathematicians but the whole thing felt kinda "ppl who work at record stores are such snobs!"
― flopson, Sunday, 9 February 2014 23:33 (twelve years ago)
you'll feel it, eventually
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 10 February 2014 00:07 (twelve years ago)
for caek:
http://www.nature.com/news/scientific-method-statistical-errors-1.14700#/b2
P values have always had critics. In their almost nine decades of existence, they have been likened to mosquitoes (annoying and impossible to swat away), the emperor's new clothes (fraught with obvious problems that everyone ignores) and the tool of a “sterile intellectual rake” who ravishes science but leaves it with no progeny3. One researcher suggested rechristening the methodology “statistical hypothesis inference testing”3, presumably for the acronym it would yield.
― k3vin k., Sunday, 2 March 2014 16:51 (twelve years ago)
Guys, come participate on my new thread: Math & Music: The Severed Alliance. Some Recent Academic Approaches (Do Not Read If You Hate Drums)
― In Walked Sho-Bud (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 2 March 2014 20:16 (twelve years ago)
they're crowdfunding a translation of the grothendieck biography
http://www.gofundme.com/7ldiwo
(i bought vol 1 i think, and skimmed it, and it left off before the math got interesting.)
― eric banana (s.clover), Friday, 21 March 2014 23:57 (twelve years ago)
http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=11326
Snide reviews form part of the folklore of Mathematical Reviews. The most famous one is as sublimely succinct as it is damning: “This paper fills a much needed gap in the literature.”
― j., Wednesday, 26 March 2014 13:38 (twelve years ago)
I review for Math Reviews (as do others ILXors I expect) and I have yet to make a joke, alas. I just say what the paper does and get on with it. My reviews in philo journals are much more critical though I think I've never gone for a lol in one of those either.
― Euler, Thursday, 27 March 2014 00:56 (twelve years ago)
on the philo math tip, attended a v. nice lecture by jean-pierre marquis that discussed notions of abstraction in mathematics, and frege's (i guess?) notion of a criterion of identity.
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Friday, 4 April 2014 05:08 (twelve years ago)
variations on "this paper fill a much-needed gap in the literature" are code for "this is an insignificant paper" in other fields too ime
― surfbort memes get played out, totally (k3vin k.), Friday, 4 April 2014 05:11 (twelve years ago)
Remember the relevant bit of verbiage in Lucky Jim?
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 13:54 (twelve years ago)
"In considering this strangely neglected topic," it began. This what neglected topic ? This strangely what topic? This strangely neglected what?
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 14:00 (twelve years ago)
now here's a paper title for the ages! http://arxiv.org/abs/1404.0799
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Friday, 4 April 2014 14:15 (twelve years ago)
Madame BovaryNed Raggett, c'est moi.
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 20:24 (twelve years ago)
Ha, wrong thread.
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 20:28 (twelve years ago)
so wow i now have an intuition for (co)homology, finally! that took forever.
i still can't crunch out calcs with it, but i get what the chain condition is about, how it relates to "the boundary of the boundary is zero" and i'm now familiar with a few different versions of chain/cochain complexes, how short sequences become long ones, and why "exactness" matters. oh and how this relates in some sense to de rahm's theorem!
thus resolves what is probably my longest period between hearing a word and being able to even describe what it means in vague handwavy terms.
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Friday, 13 June 2014 23:43 (twelve years ago)