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22:00
Hi @alarge
@obe I can't do algebraic geometry or even analysis
why are we revisiting this
obe
obe
I missed it.
it's over, let it be
obe
obe
Though it doesn't make sense to me, analysis is easier than all the things you've learned.
hardly
obe
obe
22:01
At uoft they use rudin in the first year, in fact I'm doing that next year.
it's considered easy
and when you really think about it, I haven't learned much
obe
obe
compared to say, qft or gr.
Rudin makes no sense to me
obe
obe
then read lecture notes instead.
analysis has a lot of good ones i've seen.
I'm taking it next year anyway
it's irrelevant now
obe
obe
22:03
@0celo7 you know more than a graduate student from a regular university.
@obe bullshit
that's such bullshit
obe
obe
hey I worked with phd students in theoretical optics.
I don't know ODEs, linear algebra, electrodynamics, optics
stat mech, thermo
obe
obe
because you rushed.
you skipped them.
who cares?
lol
ok let's not continue.
This is like watching a guy tell his wife that she's really pretty but she replies with "That's bullshit I don't even have a weave"
:p
22:05
no it's like if the woman is fucking paraplegic
why are you bringing this back up
@FenderLesPaul what are the prereqs for HE, ignoring the preface
obe
obe
aww you said ignoring the preface.
@0celo7 in all honesty I would say Wald
@skullpatrol Hello?
it uses Poincare-Hopf randomly, so algebraic topology?
obe
obe
HE would be considered a 3rd read in GR. right?
22:06
yeah something like a 3rd read
@0celo7 idk if that would make alg top a pre-req though
because you can look it up
you don't need to have a working knowledge of alg top to get through the book
by any means
also they use that one Hodge theorem, so harmonic analysis too
yeah I think if you get Wald you're set
obe
obe
If only you could learn by osmosis.
I would use wald as a pillow.
22:10
@FenderLesPaul list all GR/related books you have experience with
@skullpatrol Cool, I guess. I don't remember talking about phones here, though.
Just some random food for thought :-)
is someone messing with this list
I can't type A. Zee
Welcome @MarkMitchison
22:25
@TanMath you here?
@skullpatrol Hi
@MarkMitchison Hi.
We're all hi.
@MarkMitchison hello stranger
22:28
Hi @0celo7
tfw cable falls behind desk
What does "celo" between 0 and 7 stand for? @0celo7
Got it.
@ACuriousMind what is the joy/fetish of closing serious questions, what power thrill is associated with that, if I may ask?
22:42
Wow, that's a harsh question.
@0celo7 were you reading string theory books without ode's, linear algebra, EM, stat mech, real analysis?
@bolbteppa Yes.
Do you play that instrument? @0celo7
Well saying I don't know linear algebra is wrong.
I can't solve a linear system offhand because I haven't practiced.
As for ODEs...I've never needed to solve one that wasn't trivial.
EM and stat mech, I know the basics.
I think it's telling that Woit replied to me with a lovely understanding response, and offered to try a longer response and even blog post on this whole topic, while here I get complaints about amateurish formality, the values are backwards...
22:44
Real analysis I don't know shit about, that is correct.
I know people, good people, have quit or abandoned these kinds of sites over exactly this kind of silly behaviour
Welcome to the internet
It ain't no paradise
People will always behave silly IRL
@0celo7 a sneaky way to look at Rudin is interpreting it as though it is talking about representation theory:
"R is a field, and hence an additive group, real analysis is the representation theory of R acting by translation on infinite-dimensional spaces such C(R), Ck(R) and L2(R). Fourier series and the Fourier transforms are instances of this perspective. Differentiation itself arises as the infinitesimal generator of the action of translation." P. 2
http://www.math.harvard.edu/~ctm/home/text/class/harvard/55b/10/html/home/course/course.pdf
22:59
. It is easy to show that there is no x ∈ Q such that x
2 = 2.
Trial and error?
Else I have no clue :/
That part of Rudin is like the most insane thing ever, other than that one thing in the first chapter the book is okay, but that proof drives me crazy
which one
the expoenential?
or the one I just named
because trial and error works for me man
In the first chapter about the square root of 2
I mean he have the (a/b)^2 = 2 proof, the other one is ridiculous, and it's actually just some sneaky Newton's method trick with all the intuition hidden so it looks complicated
do these notes expect me to know how to prove that already?
because I can't
It drove the Pythagoreans crazy too :P
23:03
oh I remember that
obe
obe
from spivak?
numberphile
holy crap are freshmen supposed to be taking this? I guarantee none of my classmates in BC calc could understand any of this
It is the ultimate math course
Math 55
Yeah, Rudin gives that proof first in ch. 1 then he gives a complicated re-proof of the exact same thing, which drove me to tears personally, but it is actually easy when you know where it comes from math.stackexchange.com/a/141941/82615
The passage is quoted in that thread
Actual tears?
23:08
:'(
"a little more closely"
https://i.sstatic.net/eZpsn.jpg
wtf why go closer?
obe
obe
Why are you reading Rudin? Folland is the new standard for analysis ca.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0471317160.html.
So equation (3) made me cry, where did it come from, who in the world would even think to make something up like that, let alone use it in a proof, let alone re-prove something you've already proven, I don't see why it's closer or different, gah...
wtf
I can't do that
why do you people insist on making me feel inferior
23:12
Motivation?
obe
obe
Dude why do you have that impression?
Besides I'm far more inferior.
QFT and GR are harder than analysis.
you said you read rudin
no analysis is hardest thing ever
This is why I hate math books in a sense, because we all already know how to do it haha math.stackexchange.com/a/141941/82615 (read the wiki derivation of the method! it's just using $y = y_0 + f'(x_0)(x - x_0)$!) but the book tricks us into thinking we don't know how to do it
the proofs are so nonobvious
obe
obe
@0celo7 Barely.
23:13
and they don't tell you they found equation (3) by using baby calculus methods
obe
obe
Apr 21 at 23:17, by 0celo7
@ᴇʏᴇs Math's only purpose is to further physics. Remember that.
I said that
so?
obe
obe
I agree.
26 mins ago, by skull patrol
It ain't no paradise
Real analysis is an absolute nightmare, way harder than general relativity, until you realize it's easier than it haha, that it is literally just calculus but using set-theoretical words to describe easy easy ideas
(That took me like 3 years to see!)
23:15
GR is easy, just some indices
I don't know how you guys coped with the definition of a manifold in GR without real analysis, topology, metric spaces?
you don't need metric spaces
why do you need real analysis?
I mean a 'second countable Hausdorff space locally homeomorphic to a subset of R^n' blah blah ...
yeah
what about it
why do you need metric spaces for that
Second countable, which depends on the notion of a topological basis, and Hausdorff, are words coming from general topology implemented in the context of metric spaces
23:18
I know the topology
metric spaces?
how?
GR manifolds are not metric spaces
unless you Wick rotate or some BS
Okay cool, I'm assuming you studied calculus then came across topology through metric spaces first
I came across topology though Wald
then I had to do some exloring
metric spaces never played a significant part
Well a metric space is just a topological space where the topology is generated by a distance function, so if you have the topology down you basically have chapters 1, 2, 3 and 4 of Rudin down tbh if you can get past this root 2 proof haha, but formulating it in terms of metric spaces might seem too specific compared to general topology, but you could definitely hack it
I know what a metric space is
Then I don't understand your fear or concerns with real analysis
Sounds like you know a lot of it already
23:23
I can't do the proofs
they're not obvious
I can't remember the definitions
@bolbteppa That's neat.
I never thought of it like that
I wonder how many of the theorems are easily reinterpretable...
Well my advice would be to spend like 2/3 years on general topology from books like Kelley and then re-formulate every statement in real analysis as either something about general topology or representation theory (or measure theory) haha, then it will be obvious :p
Idk measure theory either
If there's one thing mathematical physics will do, it will beat it into your brain that you not only need to learn all these things, you'll even have to face the horrendous beasts known as number theory and combinatorics haha :(
7 = 2*3 + 1 :(
@bolbteppa So ramanujan and hardy are sitting in the back of a taxicab, and hardy looks at the cab number and sees that it's 4. And he says, "what a boring number to hold a number theorist" or something like that, and ramanujan says "no it's not"
"it's the smallest number that can be written as the sum of two primes in two different ways"
23:39
modern physicist: it's the smallest number which gives you the double cover of SO(4) by two SU(2)'s
@DanielSank i was
@NeuroFuzzy 2+2 and 7-3 or am I really dumb :/
@MarkMitchison hello! nice to see you again!
@0celo7 oh, right, 1 isn't prime, i'm dumb. Okay... um...
@DanielSank I was, and I am back...why do you ask?
23:50
@NeuroFuzzy so...
@0celo7 okay, 10 is the smallest positive integer that is the sum of two primes in two different ways.
@MarkMitchison to be honest, i am really sorry for all I have done.. I admit i was rude..but thanks for the help!
@TanMath Hi, not a problem. Glad you are keeping the physics up.
@NeuroFuzzy how about two distinct primes?
@bolbteppa a number gives you a double cover?
@MarkMitchison did you see my latest question?
23:55
@0celo7 I checked to 14 :/
@MarkMitchison BTW, have you finished your thesis?
@TanMath No, feel free to send me a link
@TanMath No, still a fair way away from finishing :(
Or potentially I should put :)
Depends on how you look at it ;)

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