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00:10
0
Q: Properties of a 3D Julia set from squaring a 3D number?

mickConsider a commutative 3D algebra $T$ where the nonreal units $x,y$ satisfy $$x^2 = A_1 + A_3 y $$ $$xy = 1 + B_2 x + B_3 y$$ $$y^2 = C_1 + C_3 y$$ where all the parameters $A_1,A_3,B_2,..$ are real. Also we want this algebra to be a non-associative algebra. Squaring a number in this algebra is d...

3d question :)
00:54
@mick Please don't use comments to complain about downvotes.
@XanderHenderson why?
@Jakobian Voting is intentionally anonymous. If someone wants to leave a comment explaining their downvote, that is their prerogative. But complaining about downvotes is probably not going to cause the downvoter to leave a comment (indeed, the downvoter has probably already moved on), and is not likely to lead to productive discussion.
It is just noise.
Is it forbidden by the policies of math.se?
@Jakobian The actual policy on comments is pretty restrictive (see the help center). Comments are only supposed to be used to offer suggestions for improving a post, or for asking questions which will help to clarify a question.
"Why did I get downvotes?" does neither.
01:35
Many of my comments are socratic or pushing the OP to figure more out. I’m considered inappropriate for MSE.
i dunno, a lot of that could be seen as broadly directed at improving the question. maybe not the exact way you do it.
how would you suggest for the author to improve on this proof?
@TedShifrin I typically consider those kinds of comments to be a little borderline. I tend not to delete them until either (a) the question is resolved or (b) they get flagged.
errors start after definition of $U$
no, sorry, they are before that, but never mind that
Is the author you?
That being said, without knowing what is being proved, it is a bit hard to say what can be improved.
01:41
No, those are online notes of Stefan Friedl that I'm trying to improve on
I will again note that I hate the mathematical "we".
That $\rho_A(x) = \sup\{r\|x\| : rx\in A\}$ is continuous, where $A$ is compact, convex, $0\in\text{int}(A)$
It is a weird verbal tic that I would like to see die a fiery, fiery death. Kill it dead. With fire.
Maybe nukes from orbit.
Dead.
With no chance of resurrection when the rapture cometh.
The error is in that the author wrongly assumed that $U$ is a neighbourhood of $x$
@Jakobian I have no idea. I don't know what statement is meant to be proved, and there appears to be notation in that proof which isn't defined in the proof (likely it is in the statement of the result).
01:45
@Jakobian this
What is $f_0$?
And why not just reproduce the statement of the result from whatever paper you are reading it from?
@XanderHenderson That part is wrong anyway, replace it with $x\cdot \frac{\rho_A(x)}{\|x\|}$
this is a goldmine of errors
Yeah, I am not going to invest more time in this. There is too much notation which seems to be defined elsewhere, and the whole thing feels very out-of-context to me, which makes it very hard for me to process it. And if it is full of errors (as you claim), it is going to be a game of what-a-mole. I'm out.
01:52
I've provided all the notation. I'm just wondering how do you usually handle the case of $x\in\partial A$ i.e. $\rho_A(x) = \|x\|$ because I'm struggling to find appropriate $U$ in that case
@XanderHenderson I disagree. I do not want to write “I” and “you” is not right.
@TedShifrin Oh, those are even worse.
I prefer a writing style which uses no pronouns.
Write everything in the imperative.
how about "They" as the pronoun and everything in the past tense
6
A: Minkowski functional $p_E$ is continuous if and only if $0\in E^0=\text{int}E$

saz continuity at $0$: Let $\epsilon>0$. Since $0 \in E^0$, the set $$U := \epsilon E := \{ \epsilon \cdot x; x \in E\}$$ is a neighborhood of $0$. Moreover, by the sublinearity of $p_E$, $$|p_E(x)| = p_E(x) = \epsilon p_E \underbrace{\left( \frac{x}{\epsilon} \right)}_{\in E} \leq \epsilon \cdot 1$...

I guess I'll just use this
01:59
@leslietownes Yuck.
02:09
alright, I fixed it
@leslietownes Poifekt.
02:23
@XanderHenderson what about the royal "we"
@Thorgott Nope. Even worse than the mathematical "we".
@Thorgott I am always regal — if not royal — with my we.
you may is, but we'm ain't
@TedShifrin we have that in common
Hello. I want to ask a soft question about the English language. Why is it the case that one often capitalizes "Euclidean" but does not often capitalize "abelian"?
02:35
39
Q: Why is "abelian" infrequently capitalized?

Steve HuntsmanPosted with input from meta for improvement. I usually read, e.g. "Gaussian integers" and "Riemannian metrics", and occasionally "euclidean" or "cartesian" or even "lorentzian space", but the latter examples are relatively uncommon. I have also seen, e.g. "artinian" (and it has been commented tha...

the short answer is that nobody knows, but it is definitely a convention, and maybe a convention that is pretty specific to abel and not an instance of more general phenomenon
What a convention, which really confuses me, it is.
helpfully, it seems pretty infrequent 'these days' that people's names get turned into adjectives. it seems to be something that, if we haven't abandoned the practice entirely, we tend to primarily do with names from 'long enough ago'
so you won't have to worry about offending someone in your department by not capitalizing their name, or by capitalizing it, whichever they would regard as more offensive
I see.
By the way, does "positive" sometimes mean "nonnegative"?
yes, in some subfields this is even conventionally what it means
@Juliamisto Yes.
02:43
its the French way
Hence there is "strictly positive".
English is really challenging for me, a native speaker of Chinese.
03:18
In English, "positive" almost always means "strictly larger than zero". If you want to indicate nonnegative, you should say "nonnegative". However, there are some authors (Barry Simon, for example) who adopt the convention that "positive" means $\ge 0$ and "strictly positive" means $> 0$.
There may also be certain fields where this convention is adopted (I don't know of any off the top of my head, but that doesn't mean such fields don't exist).
03:56
operator algebras (and maybe other algebras) and at least some corners of functional analysis are examples of such fields. in these areas, the gap between x being positive and strictly positive is also about slightly more than just whether or not x is allowed to be zero.
that may or may not be a coincidence, as is the fact that these folks seem to do what barry simon does :)
of course, the proper term for "x is nonnegative, not necessarily strictly positive" is "simonian," lowercase s.
 
4 hours later…
07:31
@Thorgott I think I figured out what it means. It follows from two facts: 1. Any nonsingular closed 1-form $\omega$ on $M$ whose periods have rational ratios induces a fibration $M\to S^1 = \Bbb R/\mathrm{periods}(\omega)$ by $x\mapsto \int_{x_0}^x\omega$.
2. If $M$ is a smooth compact oriented $n$-manifold then the pair $\langle e(\tau_M),\mu\rangle = \chi(M)$ where $\tau_M$ is a tangent bundle of $M$, $e(\tau_M)\in H^n(M;\Bbb Z)$ is an Euler class of $\tau_M$ and $\mu$ is the fundamental class of $M$.
and I think fibration here means fiber bundle
07:50
If I know $\bmod p: f(x) \equiv 0$, how can I work out $f(x)$ mod $p^2$? Is there any relevant theorem?
you'd need some assumption on what f is to be able to say much
In mathematics, Hensel's lemma, also known as Hensel's lifting lemma, named after Kurt Hensel, is a result in modular arithmetic, stating that if a univariate polynomial has a simple root modulo a prime number p, then this root can be lifted to a unique root modulo any higher power of p. More generally, if a polynomial factors modulo p into two coprime polynomials, this factorization can be lifted to a factorization modulo any higher power of p (the case of roots corresponds to the case of degree 1 for one of the factors). By passing to the "limit" (in fact this is an inverse limit) when the power...
may be of interest
ah, Hensel's lemma
first reason I give up studying number theory
Oh right
I actually forgot about that
I learnt about that a couple years back and I can't even recall the statement
08:10
Jan 4 at 14:09, by one potato two potato
Let $M$ be a closed orientable 3-manifold and suppose there is a fibration $K\to M\xrightarrow{f}S^1$ and consider a closed 1-form $u = [f^*(d\theta)]\in H^1(M;\Bbb Z)\simeq Hom(H_1(M),\Bbb Z)$ such that $u(\pi_1(M)) = \pi_1(S^1)$. If $S_0$ is a component of $S\subset M$ in which represents $u$, then $\pi_1(S_0)\in\ker u$ @Thorgott ?
I think Fact 1 also solves this because $f$ is a fibration induced by $u$ and $K$ can be thought as a leaf of a codimension 1 foliation induced by $u$
08:39
I see Ted's answered a great circle path question that was migrated from Physics.SE. I made a Sage thing a year or so ago for plotting such paths in 3D. It also prints the GC distance (in degrees).
And if the 2 points have the same latitude it also prints the small circle distance.
Traditionally, the GC distance is computed using the spherical trig cos law, probably in haversine form. But on a computer it's easier to convert to Cartesian & do the dot product. ;)
12
Q: What is the difference between Hensel lifting and the Newton-Raphson method?

BharatRamSo in the Newton-Raphson method to iteratively approximate a root of a real polynomial, we start with a crude approximation $x_0 \in \mathbb{R}$ for $f(x)=0$ where $f(x) \in \mathbb{R}[x]$. For the next iterate $x_1$, we put $x_1 = x_0 + \epsilon$, and we want to determine $\epsilon$ to get a bet...

 
3 hours later…
11:25
@leslietownes This. :)
11:45
+1
 
2 hours later…
14:04
Does a statement like all directional derivatives exist for a function just mean they are not undefined
14:17
Directional derivative of $f$ at $x$ in direction $v$ is the limit $\lim_{t\to 0} \frac{f(x+tv)-f(x)}{t}$
existence of all directional derivatives at a point $x$ just means such limit exists for all $v$
 
2 hours later…
16:11
I'm trying to show the statement "(a continuous, periodic function) $f$ is real-valued $\iff$ the complex Fourier coefficients satisfy $\overline{c_n}=c_{-n}$". Consider the $\impliedby$ direction. To this end, I define $g(x)=f(x)-\overline{f(x)}$ and my goal is to show all coefficients $b_n$ of $g(x)$ are zero.
Let's compute them, $$b_n=\frac1{2\pi}\int_{-\pi}^\pi g(x)e^{-inx}dx=\underbrace{\frac1{2\pi}\int_{-\pi}^\pi f(x)e^{-inx}dx}_{=c_n}-\frac1{2\pi}\int_{-\pi}^\pi \overline{f(x)}e^{-inx}dx.$$ Just how do I deal with the last integral and show it equals $\overline{c_{-n}}$? I'm stuck.
@psie Why don't you look at the integral of $(f(x) - \overline{f(x)}) \mathrm{e}^{-int}$?
$f$ is real valued, right? What does that say about $\overline{f}$?
@XanderHenderson we have $f=\bar{f}$, right?
Is that a question? Be more assertive!
You should already know the answer to that question!
@Jakobian Does that include $v$ = 0?
@User13114 Is that a direction?
Though note that it is trivial...
16:21
Yes for the directional derivative
@User13114 Are you sure?
Well I guess your not really going anywhere
How do you define a "direction"?
But, like I said, it is trivial, in in any case (where "trivial" is being used in the sense of "it evaluates to zero", not "it is easy").
$$\lim_{t\to 0} \frac{f(x+t\cdot 0) - f(x)}{t} = \lim_{t\to 0} \frac{f(x) - f(x)}{t} = 0.$$
Ok my book doesn't specify what the definition of direction is
Well, like I said, it doesn't end up mattering, because it is trivial. But a lot of texts will define directional derivatives only in the direction of a non-zero vector.
Or, equivalently, they will assume that $\|v\| = 1$.
Since nothing interesting happens when $v = 0$.
16:33
@User13114 yes
any vector $v$
Can you get something nonlinear when you compute a directional derivative?
More intuitively, they take only vectors $v$ with $\|v\| = 1$
since directions can only be made with respect to unit vectors, if you think about it
but what really matters here is the map $df_x(v) = \lim_{t\to 0} \frac{f(x+tv)-f(x)}{t}$
If $f$ is differentiable at the point $x$, then $df_x$ exists for every $v$ and is a linear map
If f is not differentiable at a point then you can get something nonlinear right?
In general, even if $df_x(v)$ exists for all $v$, it doesn't imply linearity
The map $df_x$ is called a Frechet derivative of $f$
some authors assume that $df_x$ needs to be linear for it to be called Frechet derivative
it depends
Ok I was doing an exercise where you have to show that the all directional derivatives for a function $g$ exist but $g$ is not continuous
I was getting a nonlinear directional derivative so I wanted to make sure I didn't make a mistake
16:43
@Jakobian I'm sorry, I've said rubbish here
its Gateaux derivative, not Frechet one
@Jakobian and here by differentiable I mean Frechet differentiable, which means that $f$ can be approximated by a linear map near $x$
17:01
How would you go about proving that $f(x,y)$ =
\begin{cases}
\frac{x^2y}{x^4+y^2}, & \text{if $(x,y) \neq (0,0)$} \\
0, & \text{if $(x,y)$ is $(0,0)$}
\end{cases} is bounded at the origin?
It is zero at the origin. Zero seems to be bounded...
Or do you mean on a neighborhood of the origin?
In any event, I might make the change of variables $t = x^2$, then try to think about it in polar coordinates.
I should say there exists a neighborhood around the origin where the function is bounded
17:17
@User13114 Again, make the change of variables, make the change of coordinates, and you should be fine.
17:28
my book on statistics lists one of the axioms of probability set function, for the infinite series case: if {$A_i$} is a sequence of subsets, pairwise disjoint, then $P(\cup_{i=1}^{\infty} A_i)=\sum_{i=1}^{\infty} P(A_i) $
why is this the case
doesnt the finite case for arbitrary $n$ allow us to write this?
or is there a problem to do with taking limits on either side, and commuting P and the limit?
ok, i think i got the issue: the infinite union (or intersection) has nothing to do with a limiting process?
@nickbros123 wdym
Jeebus, enrollment in math is looking terrible this semester. Across all five full-time faculty, it looks like we have maybe 200 students. Total.
@Jakobian
That is a definition...
I know the definition
I just really don't understand what you're confused about
17:41
@nickbros123 The function $$P : \mathcal{B} \to \mathbb{R} : A \mapsto 1$$ satisfies the first two properties, but not the third...
Indeed, we can cook up all kinds of arbitrary set functions which satisfy the first two properties, but not the third. There are many set functions which are not probability set functions.
well I was confused as to why the finite case, as in {$A_1,A_2...A_n$} pair wise disjoint means $P(\cup_{i=1}^n A_i =\sum_{i=1}^n P(A_i)$ wouldnt imply this. I think I got the problem here, is it that infinite unions are not a limiting process like real sequences and hence I cant apply limits both sides to the finite case?
The condition for finite unions does not imply it
The is a limit process here, $\sum_{n=1}^\infty P(A_n)$ is a limit
@nickbros123 Your definition doesn't say anything about "finite" or "infinite" cases...
the condition for infinite sums tells you, more or less, that $P$ is "continuous" in a sense
17:46
$\lim_{n\to\infty} P(\bigcup_{k=1}^n A_k) = P(\bigcup_{k=1}^\infty A_k)$
I guess a quick google search of the definition of $\bigcup_{i=1}^{\infty} A_i$ couldve avoided this question
@Jakobian I'm not entirely sure I like that phrasing... it is more just an assertion that this function has one of the nice properties of a measure, e.g. additivity.
Though I do see how you are using "continuity" here.
It can be formalized if you prefer
See "Measure theory I" by Bogachev
No no... I'm just expressing a distaste for that view of things. It isn't the intuition I like for dealing with these things (and I am familiar with Bogachev).
@Jakobian to prove that you can commute the P and limit here, do we use the 3rd condition in the definition in the way?
17:49
@nickbros123 yes
finite additivity + continuity is equivalent to countable additivity
@nickbros123 I really don't think that is the right way to think about it. My guess is that your book has defined $\bigcup_{n=1}^{\infty} A_n$ to be the set of all all $x$ such that $x \in A_n$ for some $n$. While this can be phrased as a limit in a broader mathematical framework, this is not the way that analysts / probabalists generally think about it.
@XanderHenderson I agree, Even i dont really think of it like that.. after googling how the infinite union is defined
@Jakobian Yes, indeed. But the definition here skips straight to (countable) additivity---it doesn't seem to much about with finite additivity at all (unless there is context missing), so invoking that theorem is kind of orthogonal to the given definition.
17:54
Nickbros was asking why can't we just assume finite additivity
@Jakobian I mean, you can just assume finite additivity, as finite additivity is a special case of additivity (as presented in that definition).
then they mentioned limiting processes
I've explained in which ways does this definition deal with limiting processes
the series $\sum_{n=1}^\infty P(A_n)$, and the definition of countable additivity itself includes a hidden continuity condition
as for exposition to general user, I wasn't concerned much about that, rather I tried to answer Nickbros' concerns
well you pointed out that commuting the limit and P there is not possible without 3, also I dont know how, in an analysis context, we can apply a limiting process given the definition of infinite union. I sort of realised this after understanding how the infinite union is defined
so i guess my concerns are cleared
@nickbros123 The way that analysts define infinite unions is pragmatic for the purposes of analysis. But there are other valid approach, e.g. via category theory.
But this is usually not required for analysis, and is not the way that analysts / probabilists tend to think about things.
@XanderHenderson I personally dont know how to do it in any other way than epsilons and Ns, but even if i knew, as jakobian pointed out, we cant interchange the limits..
18:06
Chat is borken...
The point that I am making is that most analysts don't regard $\bigcup_{j=1}^{\infty} A_n$ as a limit (it can be regarded as such, but that isn't the usual analyst's intuition). The sum is certainly a limit, but the set is not generally treated as a limit.
@onepotatotwopotato ah, that was not at all obvious
I also don't regard it as a limit
no, increasing unions are definitely limits
intuition-wise
yeah. huge difference between saying "X is Y" with the meaning of X is an instance of mathematical notion Y, and saying "X is Y" with the meaning of "Y is the best way to think about X"
one is a head thing, the other is a heart thing
2
18:12
well, it's pretty literal
you just need to grant that subsets are the same thing as their characteristic functions
@Thorgott This sounds like category theory talk.
no it doesn't, lol
no, I think this is an analytical point of view
category theory talk would be if I told you it's a colimit (which it is, but I don't think that's relevant right now)
when doing integrals and $A\subseteq X$, you always use facts like $\int_Af=\int_X1_Af$
Mostly I was responding to the word "just".
fair, that's a bad word
18:15
I can't tell you how many times I've heard people with a love of category theory say "Well, [X] is just a [Y] in the category of [Z]."
I love saying that too, but that's not what I'm doing right now
that's their mantra
@Thorgott You are one of those people, eh?
Unions are just colimits in the category of sets
only filtered unions!
@XanderHenderson I have no shame left
18:16
Your mom is just a... something something... in the category of... uh... something something...
(There's a joke in the somewhere, but I'm too lazy to figure it out.)
a VERY NICE LADY
your mom is not an object in Cat
Yes, but is Cat an object in YourMom?
(I'm saying that your mother barbecues cats.)
18:20
in looking for a comic example of how far "X is just Y" can go, i discovered that ncatlab has a page on the schrodinger equation
sadly its not an example of what i wanted
18:31
@XanderHenderson "A monad is just a monoid in the category of endofunctors"- Sun Tzu
3
the entirety of sun tzu's written work is just the yoneda lemma
@SoumikMukherjee I can't tell you how much that hurts my soul.
@SoumikMukherjee "Why the people are using me for random quotes?" - Sun Tzu
"Sun Tzu said what?" ---Oscar Wilde
@XanderHenderson "I don't need to fight. My quotes are enough to hurt you" -Sun Tzu, The Art of War
18:40
"Note to self: publish the book only after you've won the war"- Sun Tzu, the Art of War, Second Edition
@SineoftheTime Statistically it's either Sun Tzu or Einstein.
@leslietownes Lets adapt Hegel's work into category theory
ah, no, that already exists
19:15
Hi, how can I prove this?
I tried:
Putting x=0 and x=1 and the inequality was right
Induction?
What tools do you have?
In what context are you being asked to prove this statement?
Calculus I course, we didn't study induction
I think I need to use derivatives
I got the f'(x) and did the same process with the x=0,1, it worked
Yes, you could look at the the derivative of $1 - nx - (1-x)^n$.
but I don't know what to do next
What is $f$?
19:18
f'(x) = -n * [1 + (1-x)^n-1]
f'(x) =< 0
n is at least 1 so for x=0,1 the statement is true
I asked what $f$ was... but sure. What does that tell you?
f(x) = 1 - nx - (1-x)^n
@XanderHenderson That's where I'm stuck at
Good. $f'(x) \le 0$ for all $x \in [0,1]$. What does that mean?
That $f$ is a constant?
No. If $f$ were constant, then its derivative would be zero, yes?
What does it mean if a function's derivative is negative?
19:23
The graph of f(x) will always decrease
Negative slope
@MathHorse Okay, sure. The function is decreasing. Good. What does that tell you?
Maybe
if f(o) = 0
Than f(0+) will always be < 0?
Not always, but certainly as long as the derivative is negative, yes.
Hm.. I still can't really see what I'm trying to find here
Calculated all values and it looks correct, but I am missing a certain purpose
The argument should go something like the following: $1-nx \le (1-x)^n$ if and only if $1- nx - (1-x)^n \le 0$. When $x=0$, $1-nx-(1-x)^n = 0$. Moreover, $\frac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d}x} (1-nx-(1-x)^n) = -n - n(1-x)^{n-1} = -n(1-(1-x)^{n-1}) \le 0$ for $x \in [0,1]$. In particular, $f(x) \le f(0) = 0$ for all such $x$.
Basically, the function is $0$ at $x=0$, and decreasing.
So it stays below zero until at least $x=1$.
19:42
I see.. makes more sense now
I'll try to phrase it somehow based on my findings
Thanks
@Shaun Congrats on your Tits Alternative... paper. I don't know that math! Looks good though.
@DanielDonnelly Watch your mouth!
@XanderHenderson it's not pr0n. There was a guy named Tits
@Shaun this is the UI of the future for CD's:
That's what it will look like on your phone!
@DanielDonnelly I'm aware. He did work with Bruhat. I was making a joke. :(
In desktop mode though everything is always more spacious. I happen to have a touch-screen laptop ($400 getac)
@XanderHenderson I know, I was joking back
That search button in the lower left is what I'm hooking up rn. I have had search working before and still have the code, so... But it's only the start of many features that enable actual proofs, but not as rigorous as PA's like Lean, so everything still has to be community verified. It's cool 😎 though.
The CoREACT (Nicolas Behr et al) team that is actually developing a Diagrammatic Editor in conjunction with Coq proofs, wants me to present for 30 minutes my own independent work (namely regarding my nice GUI / UX) on March 12. I am trying to get more of it done so I have some cool features to show off by then
There tool will probably be much better than mine, but mine will have its own advantages too
MathDOPE = Database of Proof Explanations
Not drugs!
Though we don't care if you're on drugs editing your diagrams, just be safe
I'm talking to you Erdos
19:54
@DanielDonnelly I've got some bad news for you...
What's up?
I know, but I meant modern day Erdos' and or the spirit of Erdos. I don't know many math people, but I do know that Erdos took pills
Again... it was joke...
I give up. :/
Dude, I'm joking too. Drugs are bad
19:58
puts in eyedrops and takes an antibiotic pill
Well smoking is bad at least 🚭
Don't smoke, don't joke :|
😐
"A monad is just a monoid in the categoroy of endofunctors" in the sidebar
I wonder how that works with all those commutative diagrams in the definition of monad (usual)
So endo functors as objects would mean natural map arrows
Interesting! Will have to explore that later
I'm still wondering whether my site should support Arrow-to-Arrow, Arrow-to-Object arrows
the database doesn't do that naturally, so you'd typically need to fake it with a node and two database arrows (relationships), the node for connections
Quiver definitely does support it
(Quiver is 100% frontend btw)
database => backend
20:26
drugs are wonderful
@leslietownes do you know if any $a\in A$ where $A$ is a $C^\ast$-algebra can be written as $a=x+iy$, where $x$ and $y$ are Hermitian? If $a$ is normal, then the answer is yes by functional calculus. However, what if $a$ is not normal? (I'm trying to argue that a certain element is hermitian, and I could use the above result if it were true)
@Jakobian ikr
You have to be a Hermit to solve that problem, @ShaVuklia
hm, I think I can show my element is normal
in which case my question is not relevant anymore (as the normal case is already covered)
x = (1/2) (a + a-star), y = (i/2) (a-star - a)? is it important for some reason that x and y commute?
20:34
oh I was stupid, I wrote $x=1/2(x+x^\ast)+i/2(x-x^\ast)$, which is false of course
and because it was wrong, I wrongfully concluded that it must be because of commutativity issues or sth (since the result holds in $\mathbb C$)
sorry for sloppiness, but thanks for your remark!
you are definitely right to care the about the commutativity issues, there are a lot of results around expressing elements of arbitrary cstar algebras as combinations of 'nice' ones, that sound super cool and potentially useful, then when you realize that the 'nice' things generally won't commute, the coolness and the potential usefulness vanish
I don't want to be bothered with mathematics in which linear operators fail to commute. That's just passé.
@TedShifrin so matrices are passé?
20:47
Nah, in my world all matrices commute.
I'm just acting like leslie to see if it's fun.
ted, i'm not entirely sure i see where you're coming from, i don't see an attack on general non commutativity in what i wrote above, not even as a joke
Oh, it had nothing to do with this particular discussion. I was just referring to your general behavior and so I wanted to be absurd to see if it's fun.
it's a little weird that the snake in the garden of eden gave eve two things that didn't commute, but that's what the good book tells me, so it's true
when jesus said "the last shall be first, and the first last" he was talking about commutativity in the afterlife
I only read the atheists' bible.
what's that? lam's noncommutative rings?
21:19
@TedShifrin I wouldn't want to study an empty theory either. Why do you bother with such trivialities when all rings are commutative?
21:31
@TedShifrin Is it? It looks like you are having fun. :D
@Jakobian Indeed.
@TedShifrin watch out, you might be ex-commuted.
21:50
So I just learned that, based on the way compensation is handled here, if I were to quit my job and then get rehired, I would get a $5k per year pay raise...
(I would have to go back to being probationary faculty, but... double you tee eff?!)
@XanderHenderson When I retire, I will be getting more than I am making now.
@robjohn Had my father managed to retire, that would have worked for him, too.
But his retirement would have been calculated based on his salary as vice president at the college, while in his last two years, he returned to teaching.
 
1 hour later…
23:23
@leslietownes Today I learned about the Spectral Mapping Theorem for normal operators on a Hilbert space. I was already impressed by continuous functional calculus (and how it's just a simple application of the Gelfand transform!), but I would have never guessed there is even a Borel functional calculus xD
haha, i love it
23:40
@ShaVuklia Oh, that is some lovely mathematics. I really enjoyed funky anal in grad school.
3
@XanderHenderson I'm going to cite this out of context

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