Systems biologist Robert Rosen used the term "category theory" on p. 340 of Rosen, R. 1958. The Representation of Biological Systems from the Stand- point of the Theory of Categories. Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics 20, 317– 342. On Thu, Feb 22, 2024 at 10:09 PM David Roberts > wrote: Hi all, It's been a few years, but it came to my attention in the past 24 hours that Freyd's 1960 PhD thesis was titled "Functor theory", at Princeton, supervised by Steenrod and Buchsbaum. I suspect it was largely influenced by Buchsbaum, being a student of Eilenberg, and who essentially introduced abelian categories, with which Freyd's PhD was largely about; more precisely, embedding theorems and hence a study of suitable functor categories. It's not a strong data point, but I think it lends weight to the conjecture that the name "category theory" really didn't emerge quite yet at that time, at least in print. All the best, David David Roberts Webpage: https://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/David+Roberts Blog: https://thehighergeometer.wordpress.com ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: David Roberts > Date: Sat, 13 Jul 2019 at 05:13 Subject: categories: Re: "First" use of 'Category theory' to describe our field To: Ross Street > Cc: categories@mta.ca list > Dear Ross, no, that's pretty good! It's mildly surprising that it took ~20 years for the name to 'stick', but maybe less so given that the field grew slowly to start. Thanks, David David Roberts Webpage: https://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/David+Roberts Blog: https://thehighergeometer.wordpress.com On Thu, 11 Jul 2019 at 08:21, Ross Street > wrote: > > Dear David > > From memory, the Pure Mathematics Honours (USyd) course that Max Kelly taught in 1965 > was called ``Category Theory''. It concentrated on different kinds of morphisms > and factorizations in a category, and finished with adjoint functors. > Also John Gray's (UIllinois) 1968-69 graduate course had that name. > > From Eilenberg I heard that each person using categories should have their own category of expertise. > I told this to John Gray who said that was fine; the time had come for that category to be Cat. > > I would suggest that the first category theorists to think of themselves as such were Eilenberg's students at Columbia. > However, Mac Lane was definitely a category theorist. > > This is probably not the verifiable stuff you were seeking. > > Ross > > > On 10 Jul 2019, at 10:01 PM, David Roberts > wrote: > > Hi all, > > the (idle) question is: when did the phrase 'category theory' catch on > for the field? Clearly it didn't leap from either of the heads of > Eilenberg or Mac Lane full-grown, since they used the phrase 'General > theory of natural equivalences'. There are the old 'Reports of the > Midwest Category Seminar' lecture notes (the first in 1967), which > hints that 'category theory' wasn't quite the name in use. > > Even more interesting: who was the first "category theorist", by that name? > > Answers referring to verifiable sources would be best. > > Thoughts? > > David > > > > David Roberts > Webpage: https://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/David+Roberts > Blog: https://thehighergeometer.wordpress.com > [For admin and other information see: http://www.mta.ca/~cat-dist/ ] You're receiving this message because you're a member of the Categories mailing list group from Macquarie University. To take part in this conversation, reply all to this message. View group files | Leave group | Learn more about Microsoft 365 Groups You're receiving this message because you're a member of the Categories mailing list group from Macquarie University. To take part in this conversation, reply all to this message. View group files | Leave group | Learn more about Microsoft 365 Groups