Dear colleagues
This introduction to SDG will occur tomorrow Weds 18 January in MR4, CMS; 
as part of the SDG series.
Best, Jeremy

------
Jeremy Butterfield:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Butterfield
Homepage: http://www.trin.cam.ac.uk/butterfield/
Trinity College, Cambridge CB2 1TQ (tel = 01223 761524 (direct)
or 07896 471002 (mobile)).
Visit the journal, Studies in the History and Philosophy of Modern Physics
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/13552198
-----------------
Synthetic Differential Geometry - An Overview
by Filip Bar (U of Cambridge)

http://talks.cam.ac.uk/talk/index/35506

ABSTRACT:
This talk is the first talk of a seminar on SDG I'm organizing this term. I 
intend to give a small introduction to SDG as well as various impressions what 
it involves.

In a nutshell SDG is concerned with the analysis and geometry of infinitesimals 
in the spirit of Leibniz, one of the founding fathers of Calculus. It starts 
off with 'crazy' axioms like that any function f: R -> R is differentiable, or 
that any function f: [0,1] -> R is integrable. To realize SDG as a rigorous and 
interesting mathematical discipline input from Category Theory and Logic (in 
particular logical aspects of Topos Theory), Algebraic Geometry and 
Differential Geometry is needed. But the original motivation for SDG lies in 
physics, in particular in classical dynamics. It is an offspring of F.W. 
Lawvere's famous lectures on Categorical Dynamics. In fact, the notion of 
infinitesimality in SDG (modelled by nilpotents) corresponds to the intuition 
of physicists, namely that of a small perturbation, which is negligible up from 
a certain order.


_____________________________________________________
Sent by the CamPhilEvents mailing list. To unsubscribe 
or change your membership options, please visit the list 
information page: http://bit.ly/CamPhilEvents

Posts are now archived here: http://bit.ly/CamPhilEventsArchive

Reply via email to