Most scientific & mathematical disciplines I know of have results that educated outsiders can appreciate and go "wow" after a brief acquaintance, even without understanding the details. Does anyone know of such a result for category theory?
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
The fact that it's possible to directly formalize the world of homotopy types without reducing everything to sets.
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
If someone was interested in augmenting human intelligence with computers, say, maybe they would be interested in reducing the mismatch between human mathematical thoughts and their formal representation on computers.
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Replying to @SebastienZany
Plenty of work does this without category theory.
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
Sure. Is that a reason to not be interested?
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I don't need a reason not to be interested - life is short. I need a reason to be interested.
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Replying to @michael_nielsen @SebastienZany
michael_nielsen Retweeted michael_nielsen
Here are two examples of the kind of thing I have in mind:https://twitter.com/michael_nielsen/status/1115787203244773376 …
michael_nielsen added,
michael_nielsen @michael_nielsenAn example, from general relativity: "If you're on a spaceship, and carry a really good clock down near to the event horizon of a black hole, and come back, you'll find that time has slowed down relative to people who didn't go on the trip". Dwell on that, & it's mindblowing.Show this thread1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes - 2 more replies
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