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00:55
Ugh, another dumb question but: suppose I have a monoidal, simplicially enriched category. Presumably this corresponds to what, a functor $\Delta^{op}\to sSet-Cat$? So then, can I take coherent nerves on both sides to obtain a monoidal quasicategory $N(\Delta^{op})\to Cat_\infty$?
01:06
if your functor takes values in fibrant objects, then sure
Right, good point. Okay.
My functor does. =P
My functor brings all the boys to the yard.
@SaulGlasman do you know if, from the point of view, the construction $N^\otimes:Alg(sSet-Cat)\to Alg(Cat_\infty)$ is functorial?
oh good.
Sometimes these really big categories of categories scare me...
01:42
@JonBeardsley Last year I saw a great talk directed at (very strong) high school students trying to sell the (compactly supported) Euler characteristic as the "cardinality of a space". Are you familiar with this: math.ucr.edu/home/baez/counting
The talk I saw was not by Baez, but it must have been influenced by him.
@JohnBerman no haven't heard of it. interesting!
Thanks!
 
3 hours later…
04:23
Why is MString called MString?
 
1 hour later…
05:25
It would seem that the Grothendieck construction for monoidal simplicially enriched categories cannot possibly respect fibrancy.
 
2 hours later…
07:20
@JonBeardsley I think it was originally referred to as MO<8>, and then MString became more popular because of the relation to string bordism groups
 
3 hours later…
10:25
@TylerLawson: Thanks. I think that DGA is for p=3 exactly the (reduced) Cobar resolution. x \in C^1 corresponds to the "identity" $Z/p\rightarrow F_p$ and $y$ corresponds to $Z/p\mapsto F_p, x\mapsto x^2$. I think in that this case the ideal generated by $y^2$ and $d(y^2)$ is acyclic, so dividing it out, would make the DGA smaller in some sense. I don't know what is going on for other p's.
or whether there are even bigger acyclic ideals.
@JonBeardsley F_2 is the free group on two generators $\widehat{F}_2$ is its profinite completion
@JonBeardsley brouwers fixed point theorem isn't bad. you can reduce it to a computation that $\pi_1(\mathbb{C}\setminus \{0\})$ contains the natural numbers as a set.
@JonBeardsley I also made german hs students prove that the human number was a knot invariant. (this is the smallest number of people that you can represent the knot with)
@JonBeardsley I also have a fun talk on compactification of conic sections based at the origin that is accessible and fun but not AT.
 
3 hours later…
13:09
how do you represent a person with a knot?
oh sorry, I guess the people are representing the knot... are they joining limbs or something?
@SeanTilson i thought this was a really good talk. introducing young people to the idea of moduli objects seems like a great use of time
 
2 hours later…
14:58
@HenrikRüping You're right. In fact, I guess at odd primes I really have described the cobar complex; that's somewhat ridiculous that it seems to be the "minimal" resolution if you want the underlying DGA to be free. So you've described the case G = Z/3 as a graded-commutative DGA with generators x, y, satisfying y^2 = 0 and d(y) = x^2.
 
4 hours later…
18:40
So the fibrant replacement functor in simplicial categories just replaces the mapping complexes with weakly equivalent Kan complexes?
19:36
@JonBeardsley, yes, you can apply any functorial fibrant replacement of simplicial sets that commutes with finite products (e.g. Sing|-| or Ex^\infty).
 
2 hours later…
21:36
@Adeel thanks!

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