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The older books on model categories, such as Hovey and Hirschhorn do suffer from not covering combinatorial model categories, which is of paramount importance to any modern exposition of model categories.
Riehl’s Categorical Homotopy Theory does cover model categories, so I’m not sure what would be the benefit of reading Lurie’s appendix first.
You are lucky, as now there is this text:
which gives a pedagogical account, starting at the very beginning and using the modern theory, with full details and full proofs.
You simply read that from first line to last line. When you are done, let me know. Then we check what happened to you in the process and depending on that I’ll give you a suggestion as to what to read next.
Urs, I’m looking through these notes for the first time. These look really great; thank you!
Small comment: at the top of 7/100, would you rather say unions of finite intersections of subbasis elements?
Another minor comment: while it might not be crucial for your development, in the general theory of topological categories, source and sink diagrams are even allowed to be large (not just indexed over sets), and this makes a difference in the general development, as The Joy of Cats makes clear. For example, it’s a theorem that the topological category axioms on force to be faithful, but this isn’t the case on omitting the largeness condition.
I may have more comments later, as I read…
Hi Todd,
thanks for these comments, and for all further ones you may have.
Small comment: at the top of 7/100, would you rather say unions of finite intersections of subbasis elements?
So you are saying the word “elements” needs to appear, right? Sure, thanks.
Since my laptop died last week, I am on a small “web-book”, and this stalls when I ask it to edit that big page. Might you have a second and be so kind to make the edit?
I mean in the nLab entry Introduction to Stable homotopy theory – P
Thanks!
Sorry I wasn’t more clear. No, what I meant was that you had “finite intersections of unions of subbase [elements]”, whereas it should be “unions of finite intersections of subbase elements”. I’ll make the edits in a bit.
(Even under the distributive law, the former collection is usually strictly contained in the latter. For example, the product topology of takes as subbase elements sets of the form , where are open in ; an arbitrary union of such can be written in the form for some , and then finite intersections of those will not look much different from rectangles or finite unions of rectangles. So the interior of a circle will not be a finite intersection of unions of subbase elements.)
Ah, right, thanks for catching this!
Edited. The compile time was about 2 minutes (not too bad).
Different people learn in different ways, but I personally would suggest not to bother with a roadmap at all. Try to just get a ’big picture’ overview, reading whatever you need in whatever random order you find in order to do so. For instance read introductions, surveys, lecture slides, …, dipping into details a little if something intrigues or mystifies you. And then, as soon as possible, try to find some open problem, no matter how small, to think about. You can start with a big idea (construct K3 cohomology, for instance!), and narrow it down further and further to something you can actually realistically get into. You’ll learn immeasurably more that way, by trying to find techniques that might help you solve the problem, and to understand what goes into those techniques.
can I ask if it covers combinatorial model categories?
It discusses the concept of cofibrantly generated model categories. A combinatorial model category is a cofibrantly generated model category whose underlying category is locally presentable.
And am I right that it is a text mainly on “abstract” homotopy theory (that is, homotopy theory in model categories) that uses classical topology as an example?
Yes. And that should be exactly what you are after.
Would this text suffice for reading Lurie (along with something on simplicial homotopy theory?
Yes, you just need in addition some basic idea of simplicial sets and the classical model structure on simplicial sets.
Originally I had planned to include discussion of that in the notes, but then it became too long. But the core of the material exists, it is at
The proofs that this entry presently omits (but we could fill them in as we go along) are all in the excellent textbook
which I recommend.
@tret3jtt, I’d like to share my own experience, which echoes Richard’s comments. I’ve found that all of this stuff is extremely difficult to learn if you’re just doing it “for the sake of it”, trying to read things cover-to-cover in The Recommended Order. That’s not how math works, mostly because that’s not how our brains work. I’ve found that having a more specific and directed goal in reading makes it far easier to read difficult mathematics, and it makes it much easier to actually retain and mentally organize the things you’re reading. As I think is common, as an undergrad I sort of had this sense that e.g. I’d “know everything there is to know about abstract algebra” if only I read Dummit & Foote cover-to-cover. Not only is that false, but it presupposes that there is a binary meaning of the word “know”. All of this is just to say that I would strongly encourage you to remain flexible in your expectations and dynamic in your approach.
Re #10: I’m not sure if Lurie’s technical appendix is the best place to start. Perhaps Dwyer and Spaliński’s survey or Hovey’s book is easier to read.
And I can only concur with Aaron’s opinion in #12: things are much easier to learn if you have a certain goal in mind, e.g., a research project. Reading things in linear order cover to cover is rarely the best idea.
So, my point is how can I even start research before I know some of the theory I’m interested researching in?
Firstly, one can start by trying to get an overview, as I suggested. Mathematical breakthroughs are achieved by creativity, not through knowing a mass of material. What is important is that one gets a ’feeling’ for a topic; that one develops ’intuition’. You could read through all of the formal proofs of Lurie’s work, and still not truly understand much about -category theory. Much more important than knowing formal proofs is to understand the motivation, the context, the pioneering ideas that shape the subject, the big problems that people are working towards.
Secondly, you do not have to take a research problem. You could just take an important result, and work towards understanding that. For instance, you could study the statement that there is a model structure on groupoids that is Quillen equivalent to a certain model structure on simplicial sets, of 1-types. And then you could study the stable version of this. You would learn lots of techniques for this, much more quickly than if you attempt to read something from cover to cover; and you will learn something of the motivation for the notion of -categories. Or you could study the model structures on two notions of -category, say quasi-categories and complete Segal spaces, and the Quillen equivalence between them. You could try to vary things; can you in a different way give a proof from scratch in the case of -categories, for instance?
Or, for something more classical, you could take as motivation something like one of the goals of Urs’s notes, namely to compute the first few stable homotopy groups of spheres. Just working through one of the approaches here, using the May and Adams spectral sequences, will teach you a lot, and give you a springboard to chromatic homotopy theory, which is where much research involving -categories is focused.
Or, if you’re more ambitious, you could try to understand elliptic cohomology, beginning with say the computational stuff in the Hopkins-Mahowald paper (if you understand that, you’ll already have learned an incredible amount), moving to the Goerss-Hopkins obstruction theory, …, and then trying to understand Lurie’s paper.
There are hundreds of other similiar concrete projects.
It appears that every mathematician (even a classical analyst-to-be) should go through the material in D-F
This is a complete misconception. Did Euler need to go through the material in this book? Did Grothendieck? Of course not. Mathematics is not defined by any one piece of knowledge. One forgets things after a while anyway! What is important is that one has depth of understanding, then one will be able to quickly refresh oneself with regard to a certain topic, should one need to.
I’ve never even seen a copy of D-F… Not every mathematician goes through the US system, you know.
Hi tret3jtt! Let me just say first that it’s great that you ask here. If you are a student and wish to get into homotopical algebra, that is fantastic, and nobody should put you off doing that. You should choose what you feel is best for you, don’t listen to other people too much :-). You have not been rude at all.
My suggestions are only intended to give you an alternative point of view to think about, or have at the back of your mind. You by no means have to follow the advice; many would no doubt disagree with it :-).
My opinion on mathematical education is that what one actually learns is very much secondary to the process of learning it. One’s development ’as a mathematician’ through one’s university courses is, I would say, more important that what one actually learns. Part of developing as a mathematician is certainly to be exposed to a range of different ways of thinking, different styles of mathematics.
Regarding Lurie’s works, I was not suggesting at all that they are poorly written or lack motivation. You can certainly learn a lot from his expository material: introductions, little comments, etc. But I personally would not regard reading through the works in depth as a good idea; I would rather suggest to dip into them as one needs. Just like most algebraic geometers do not read EGA/SGA from beginning to end (though there are no doubt exceptions, such as Mochizuki, apparently); they dip into them as needed.
I would indeed argue that Lurie’s three books do not contain very much material of the kind I was getting at, suitable for an ’end goal’. The really original ’end goal’ stuff is contained in other papers of his, that make use of the material in the three books. This is not to put those books down at all, I am just trying to explain that the innovations are, for a beginner, technical. It would be better (only in my opinion, again) to have something with more of a story to tell to get into.
Regarding proofs: I completely agree that one should, as far as possible, not rely on black boxes (I myself like to understand the tools that I use thoroughly), though again, one should not make blanket rules. And proofs are very important. But digesting them second hand is not so important, I would say. What is important is that you make a proof ’live’ for yourself: you have a need for it, you have some feeling as to why it is hard or easy, unexpected or expected, and the details can then tell you a lot.
But I do not wish to suggest that you would not learn anything by following a ’roadmap’: you certainly would! I am just trying to suggest something that might possibly be even more fulfilling. But ultimately, you know yourself best, and I’m sure you’ll be very successful whatever route you take!
I largely agree with Richard Williamson’s comments, but it might help to know if you are in graduate school and have an adviser you feel good about; talking with a good adviser can help immensely in sketching possible plans of study or plans of attack.
Please excuse the following words if they seem preachy or overly generalized.
On a general emotional level: the idea that there are thousands of pages that one must know to get into a subject can be extremely daunting and dispiriting. My own personal experience is that math also involves a great deal of sheer fooling or fiddling around on one’s own; the more dignified word is ’experimentation’. It’s much easier to work hard if one is having fun discovering and exploring for one’s self or with trusted mathematical friends. It need not be about anything especially important. (John Horton Conway discovered his theory of games and numbers largely by playing… games.)
Part of the point is that acquiring mathematical knowledge often happens very accidentally in the course of happy explorations, and in the course of grappling with specific and sometimes very concrete problems.
Also a spirit of independence helps. In my own case, it often takes the form of a general dissatisfaction with how mathematics is presented, and wanting to re-do it on my own terms. It can be in the feeling that one can do things more generally and more cleanly, or conversely in the feeling that sometimes there is needless or over-elaborated generality that loses sight of the really critical driving examples. It can reside in the feeling that one can reorganize a proof and make it much prettier. It can even reside in choice of notation. The general idea is to make mathematics one’s own.
Also: feel free to go “slumming around” in a relaxed way, attending talks or seminars on areas outside of immediate interest. The really top-notch category theorists have an impressive breadth of knowledge and are open to thinking about just about any kind of mathematics, equipped with the kind of “inside edge” that the powerful general methods that category theory affords. Lawvere and Joyal are impressive examples of that spirit, and I notice that John Baez is moving into areas which seem at first glance very applied but which are amenable to graphical calculi rooted in category theory.
I agree too with Richard that knowing the contexts and narratives that abstract developments are a response to is extremely valuable, and there a good adviser can be invaluable.
I guess the last bit of preaching is that much of knowledge acquisition occurs on a “need-to-know” basis. Don’t worry too much about “ought to know” – there is no end to it. Instead, in the course of grappling with a problem, there will arise stuff that you realize you absolutely must know – that’s the kind of thing you throw yourself energetically into, and in that spirit there is nothing that gets in the way of mastering whatever it is you need to know.
My own personal experience is that math also involves a great deal of sheer fooling or fiddling around on one’s own…In my own case, it often takes the form of a general dissatisfaction with how mathematics is presented, and wanting to re-do it on my own terms.
Hear hear. I think I still have pages and pages of notes that I wrote to myself in grad school explaining what various aspects of category theory and homotopy theory were “really about”. Nowadays I do the same sort of thing by writing nLab pages.
Also a spirit of independence helps.
This expresses elegantly the heart of what I am getting at,
If “Be more independent.” is going to be the main reply you suggest to give to young students who have the guts to come to the nForum and ask for advice, I’d ask you to reconsider.
It’s evident that the status of the textbook literature in homotopy theory is lacking behind the enormous development of the field. Any student who asks for advice on literature here deserves to get some helpful pointers (check out over at MO for inspiration).
This should be especially so here on the nForum, whose purpose is not to be a general chat box, but to be the talk pages that accompany the edit of useful information on the Lab.
The optimal attitude of expert regulars here, when faced with a puzzlement about literature, would be: What are you looking for? Is it not on the Lab yet? Then let’s get going and start creating pages for it!
Encouraging a «spirit of independence» is different from a command «be more independent». I have worked rather a lot with students of different levels, and my suggestions (which, to emphasise once more, are certainly not a claim to be a universal truth, only something for tret3jtt to consider) come from that experience to a large degree, not only my own experience of learning.
I made several concrete suggestions of ’end goals’ as opposed to textbooks. I am happy to elaborate. But my point is precisely that one should keep in mind whatever literature one stumbles upon, all kinds of different things, rather than sticking to a prescribed ’roadmap’. Clearly tret3jtt has already come across many standard texts, so he/she is more than capable of finding relevant literature. Picking out a roadmap amongst this literature is the point I’m contending: just keep it all in mind, and be driven by more particular goals, whether they be working towards an existing result, or exploring something new.
One might agree or disagree with that, but let’s not misinterpret it.
This should be especially so here on the nForum, whose purpose is not to be a general chat box, but to be the talk pages that accompany the edit of useful information on the nLab.
1) I think that using the nForum for discussion of category theory/higher category theory in general, sometimes independently of the nLab, is perfectly fine.
2) In my opinion, most discussion on the nForum is in fact related usually related to nLab pages, at least to a certain degree. Even I, who rarely edits the nLab, am occasionally drawn to do so, after an nForum discussion.
The optimal attitude
Let’s not be prescriptive. If tret3jtt is given some advice that he/she one day may find somewhat useful, then something has been achieved as well. There is more to the world than the nLab :-). (Even if it is of course important that matters of the nLab are not drowned in other discussion; but I don’t think there’s any evidence of that.)
I also understood “a spirit of independence helps” as simply advice for the appropriate mindset / study method while reading the literature pointers that had already been given.
whose purpose is not to be a general chat box
I don’t think that the “regulars” in general, and I in particular, make a habit of misusing the nForum in this regard. But now and then it may be okay to speak from the heart.
I am sincerely sorry if I gave offense to anyone.
17 I never even heard of D-F and consider myself a relatively broadly educated in mathematics. Google finds mixed, even strange, opinions about it, e.g. http://www.adequacy.org/stories/2001.10.14.163749.94.html
Happily, there is an (extensive) errata of the 3rd edition available: pdf.
As far as the statement that Lang covers “cover all the topics from algebra”, I find rather untrue. It goes for long on some topics like Galois theory, while almost none on many others, which I find basic in my own experience in algebra. If I am gonna teach a graduate course on algebra, I will simply have to supply many supplements (if Lang were a textbook). Look for example a comparable size first volume of Faith’s algebra to see how different a same-volume algebra book from about the same historical period. Not to mention that, more recently, some new topics came at forefront.
I’m not sure exactly what a “chat box” is, but I don’t think it’s wrong to have discussions on the forum that don’t relate specifically to the nlab. Isn’t that what the “Atrium” category and subcategories are for?
27: Exactly. The classification of this thread is now “Mathematics, physics and philosophy”, which is a part of the Atrium, not part of the nLab classification (see https://nforum.ncatlab.org/categories.php).
(I hope there is no concerted objection if the discussion here is not necessarily with a view toward the creation or editing of nLab pages, since the response from tret3jtt indicates a more personal discussion might not be remiss.)
May I ask, tret3jtt, where you are in your schooling? Your use of the word “schoolboy” makes me think you might be in high school, or recently so. (If that is the case, I’m very impressed, and you seem to have large appetites for mathematics, which is of course fantastic.)
Reading EGA from beginning to end is something that some people would strongly recommend for learning modern algebraic geometry, but see also this MathOverflow thread for various other suggestions. (Do you tune in to MO?)
Regarding Lang’s Algebra: it’s rather slanted towards those who plan to work in algebraic number theory and algebraic geometry (what Rota calls “Algebra I”). It’s a fine book, and I consult it often, but it’s far from comprehensive. I like Jacobson’s Algebra books for a bit of counterbalance.
Hi tret3jtt,
it actually provoked some thoughts for me
That’s great, then I am happy :-).
Many people I know of disregarded HA, saying it’s a “useless subjects” or that it’s “1000 pages and 0 results”
I certainly would not agree with those people. It is far from useless; indeed, it is clear that it is going to be vitally important in many areas of pure mathematics for the foreseeable future.
For example, as I understand, not everything that Lurie created is directly applicable to some classical problems, some of his work are namely for “higher algebra” (or, as I call it, homotopical algebra). Same can be said about Clark Barwick, Moritz Groth, Gijsbert Heuts, Saul Glasman.
Absolutely, there are many innovations within higher algebra in the work of Lurie and all of these people, and these innovations are very important. It is just important to appreciate the broader context into which these innovations fit.
Maybe, those are not “research subjects” for most mathematicians. But I got an impression that “homotopical algebra” (subsuming higher category theory, higher algebra, model categories, infinity-operads, higher topoi, derived, homotopical and spectral algebraic geometry) is a living and breathing field of mathematics. Maybe, I was wrong.
You are not wrong, and your impression is very much correct. Indeed, I would say that is a very fashionable field just now (only ten years ago, there were only a handful of people thinking about these things): we see -categories cropping up in papers all the time. And this research certainly does fully include research in higher algebra for its own sake.
But, of course, I may be wrong. And higher algebra can still be tool and only a tool for classical topology and geometry. Or it can be a “dead area” (doesn’t seem like it to me, though). If it’s so, please, correct me.
Again, in my opinion you are correct: it is not only a tool for other areas, and it is very far from a dead area.
My only purpose is to encourage you to consider the context from which higher algebra has arisen, and to consider the context in which it is being used as a tool in research today; because both of these things will lead you to a deeper appreciation and understanding of higher algebra itself.
But my impression from your thoughts in this thread are that you are very capable and very motivated. If you would like to follow a roadmap to learn higher algebra for its own sake, from beginning to end, by all means go for it! It could be the best thing for you. You will undoubtedly learn an enormous amount, which will be very useful to you whatever you come to do in mathematics later. You could try just jumping into the beginning of Lurie’s books, and then looking up relevant literature whenever you do not understand something. But you will know better than any of us what would suit you best.
Good luck! Feel free to ask questions here on the nForum, I am sure that many of us would be happy to answer.
Regarding EGA and SGA:
I understand that “to sit and read entire EGA” is not the best idea for everyone. But I was dissatisfied with the level of generality and “rigor” in regular textbooks. In particular, I would always choose clear and abstract exposition over informal motivational one
I have a lot of sympathy for this point of view: when one wants the details, I agree entirely should be presented clearly, rigorously, and thoroughly, and have followed this philosophy in the lectures notes that I have written for my own teaching. EGA is indeed excellent in this respect (SGA a little less so, though still very good). The point is again just that there is more to the subject that a series of results; the broader context in which they fall is equally important, and for this one would need to look beyond EGA. Studying something like the classification of surfaces, such as in the book by Beauville, would be a much better project, in my opinion, using this as a springboard to jump into EGA, SGA, and whatever else one might like.
Reading EGA from beginning to end is something that some people would strongly recommend for learning modern algebraic geometry,
Very few algebraic geometers that I have encountered would recommend this. A very useful reference: yes. Reading from beginning to end: no. Of course there are rare exceptions, but I have very met very few (who actually have some experience to draw on, as opposed to just espousing a point of view).
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