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quantum dilogarithm has basic references. There is also similar entry dilogarithm.
Look Jim, do your homework. I have met you first time at Fadell’s birthday conference about 15 years ago. We discussed about a reference of a French thesis relating some CFT physics and Seiberg-Moore procedure/polytopes for CFT and their relation to Grothendieck-Teichmueller tower. You were enthusiastic that I sent you the thesis. But the thesis was in very complicated many file formats and emails were not advanced as now. I had an email which I could use from terminal editor, and it took me about 2 hours to prepare files in sendable formats and send all the files and explanations how to open and use them. Never an answer form you. Ever since I have a feeling of superficiality in every communication we had ever since, kind of at the level of key words. I am sorry but are you seriously trying to make my impression of superficiality more stone-inscribed ?
Gentlemen, if I may:
I expect that Jim could be away from a suitable university library at present (I got a different query from him offline which suggests this), and he is trying to work with online sources. This might temporarily impinge on his ability to “do homework”.
Jim, I tried the following method. I went to the nLab page dilogarithm, and in the references clicked on the arXiv article “Dilogarithm identities” by Kirillov. I then did a search in the .pdf file for “pentagon” (using ctrl-F), and the best I could find is on page 82, equation 2.60. Is this what you were looking for?
It’s none of my business, but the language being used in comment 4 seemed strong, so I was hoping I could be of assistance. One thing though that caught my interest is the mention of the Fadell birthday conference. I believe I was there! Jim had asked whether I might be interested in coming (I was living in Chicago at the time), and I came up for a day. I am sorry that I did not make your acquaintance at the time, Zoran.
It was his 70th birthday, I believe; I was a graduate student at Wisconsin. Unlike our email proceedings, i should however praise Jim’s excellent, energetic and interesting conference lecture (including the most interesting historical aspect).
I should emphasize another thing about quantum dilogarithm: Kirillov indeed came to the discovery before Fadeev and Kashaev but recently I heard from someone that there was yet another person involved in early prehistory, but I should check for that fact independently.
By the way, when mentioning unavailability of references, do you know an online source of the incident between Grothendieck and IHES some 3 years ago or so ? It is possibly relevant for the Grothendieck’s copyright denial in recent email. At the time of the copyright denial I have not known the story which I heard of only recently. Apparently few years ago, Grothendieck wrote a letter to l’IHES requesting a copy of somebody’s (mathematical I guess) preprint from many years ago. Somebody corresponding, possibly a secretary, wrote to him back that they do not copy and deliver publications to arbitrary people, something of the sort. I would like to know the exact story.
Hi Zoran - I would not have the guts to do it, but you could email Luc Illusie; he was the recipient of Grothendieck’s letter (as far as I know) that forbade all further reproduction of G’s work. Or do you know anyone at IHES?
These are a priori too different events, and roughly a couple of years apart. Illusie is of course not related to l’IHES. Preprint incident was earlier and it is not referred to in the letter to Illusie, but I can imagine if A.G. had a drive to do a little excursion back to mathematics and wanted to do some readings and was denied a key preprint help as an “arbitrary” person and this happened from the institution which is legendary for the connection to him, then I could understand that this could influence the second incident.
Will try to find those files OR is some version of them on the arXiv
I think not the thesis, but I might dig it in some of the backups from old age…
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