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* subculture
@ 2010-09-24 15:44 Eduardo J. Dubuc
  2010-09-25  0:38 ` subculture Ruadhai
                   ` (3 more replies)
  0 siblings, 4 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Eduardo J. Dubuc @ 2010-09-24 15:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Categories list

As evident from the subject, this personal answer to Toby Bartels is intended
to have general incumbency.

Dear Toby, thanks for this msage, i will try to explain:

Toby Bartels wrote:
  > Eduardo J. Dubuc wrote at first:
  >
  >> Dear Toby, your choice of example is very unfortunate. Mac Lane wrote that
category theory was invented to define functor, and that functor was invented
to define "natural" transformation.
  >
  > Yes, I know; that was quite deliberate.

Well, I said "unfortunate" for those that are in favor of introducing the name
"evil" (or any other name) as a definition of "not invariant under equivalence".
You see, this is because to introduce a name the property has to be important
enough and of frequent use. To sustain your case you should have given
examples of properties (or concepts) which not being very important and of
frequent use, have nevertheless an universally accepted proper name.

  > but beyond that I have no idea what upsets you,
  > and I'm not going to worry about it any more.

I appreciate that you had worried at some point, and I am glad you do not
worry any more.

I try to explain why I sounded upset with you in my last mail because it has a
general interest concerning the question of whether  we are a subculture or
part of the mainstream of mathematics.

   Recall that this was my only mail that concerns you in particular, and that
it was in response to a mail of you, and that it was that mail that I felt
upsetting.

I quote from it:

  > Shall we stop saying "natural" and say "invariant under composition"?
  > Or is that term allowed under the grandfather clause,

"the grandfather clause" is not something nice to qualify my sayings.

  > As a proud citizen of the Ghetto of Category Land,

sounds ironic and upsetting, showing that you were very upset that i consider
certain characteristics of our group proper of a ghetto, in the sense of
isolation from the world of real mathematics. Well, I do think that one of
these characteristics is the introduction of names and terminology in an
unjustified way.  Andre Joyal call it "a subculture" (well, he just said there
is a danger to become a subculture) which if you think a little, sounds better
than "ghetto", but it is as negatively strong or even worst.

I apologize to you for using that term that you had felt insulting (and I
imagine some others in the list may have felt so)

Your msage had an overall upsetting style, and I reacted accordingly.

All the best, no hard feelings from my part.  e.d.

[For admin and other information see: http://www.mta.ca/~cat-dist/ ]


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re:  subculture
@ 2010-09-27  3:06 Todd Trimble
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Todd Trimble @ 2010-09-27  3:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Joyal, André; +Cc: Categories list

Dear Andre,

As someone who contributes to the nLab, let me assure you that
opinions on the appropriateness of the word "evil" (in the sense
being discussed here) also vary among workers in the nLab.
Not all of the subscribers of this list may know about the nLab,
but we are far from a homogeneous block. There are certainly
regular nLab contributors who have voiced their displeasure with
the word.

I think you're right: the people who use this term are still a
pretty small group. Nevertheless, sometimes slang terms do
catch fire and become widespread, and evidently this has
become a cause for alarm for some people here.

While I won't take a position on the acceptability on the word
myself, beyond saying that it's not likely to become part of my
own language, I would at least like to defend its appearance
in the nLab. To some extent, the nLab functions as a dictionary
for those who work with categorical language (that is at least
one of its functions). So one could view the people who edit
the nLab as, in part, editors of a dictionary; as such, there is
a kind of obligation to record uses of the living language and
describe it as accurately as possible.  Thus the function here is
descriptive, not prescriptive (or proscriptive).

That said, it's also true that reputable dictionaries will record
how the word is received by speakers: some words may be
described as 'vulgar' or 'offensive' (at least for some speakers),
or as slang or substandard or whatever. So if a word like "evil"
is offensive to some people here, it's arguably our responsibility
to record that fact as well, and link to this discussion here.

A case in point is the (I think tongue-in-cheek) expression
"fascist functor". Some of you may recall that a "free functor"
is to the "left" (in an adjoint string), so a "fascist functor" would
be to the "right" in an adjoint string. It's a little jokey (as some
people think "evil" is), and yet it still excites emotions, as we
discovered in a recent nForum discussion. Something of those
reactions were hinted at in the Lab, and I think we would do
well to do the same with regard to "evil".

Best,

Todd



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Joyal, André" <joyal.andre@uqam.ca>
To: "Ruadhai" <ruadhai@gmail.com>; "Eduardo J. Dubuc" <edubuc@dm.uba.ar>
Cc: "Categories list" <categories@mta.ca>
Sent: Saturday, September 25, 2010 7:10 PM
Subject: categories: RE : categories: subculture


Dear All,

I am displeased with the idea that
terminology is purely conventional
and that everything is acceptable.
The "evil" terminology is promoted
by a small group of peoples active in the nLab.
It does not reflect a commun usage in the
mathematical community.

Best,
André


[For admin and other information see: http://www.mta.ca/~cat-dist/ ]


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2010-10-03 22:10 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 21+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2010-09-24 15:44 subculture Eduardo J. Dubuc
2010-09-25  0:38 ` subculture Ruadhai
2010-09-25 23:10   ` RE : categories: subculture Joyal, André
2010-09-26  2:43   ` subculture David Leduc
2010-09-26  3:19   ` subculture Fred Linton
     [not found]   ` <AANLkTikJoHkO2M_3hnrQqqFq2_N2T9i6KF2DRFbHTujP@mail.gmail.com>
2010-09-26  3:43     ` subculture Eduardo J. Dubuc
2010-09-25  4:01 ` Not invariant but good Joyal, André
     [not found] ` <B3C24EA955FF0C4EA14658997CD3E25E370F59BE@CAHIER.gst.uqam.ca>
2010-09-26  3:29   ` John Baez
2010-09-27  2:54     ` Peter Selinger
2010-09-27 15:55     ` RE : categories: " Joyal, André
2010-09-28  2:10       ` RE : " John Baez
2010-09-29 18:05         ` no joke Joyal, André
2010-09-30  2:53           ` John Baez
2010-09-28 10:18       ` RE : categories: Re: Not invariant but good Thomas Streicher
2010-09-29 21:25         ` Michael Shulman
2010-09-30  3:07           ` Richard Garner
2010-09-30 11:11           ` Thomas Streicher
2010-09-30 19:39             ` Michael Shulman
2010-09-30 11:34           ` Thomas Streicher
     [not found] ` <20101001092434.GA9359@mathematik.tu-darmstadt.de>
2010-10-03 22:10   ` Michael Shulman
2010-09-27  3:06 subculture Todd Trimble

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