Category Theory

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Category Theory is a foundational representation of mathematics. It directly relates to how data and computation can be represented as functions or relations. Due to its generally applicable nature, it is so general that many mathematicians calls it Abstract nonsense.

The seminal paper, A General Theory of Natural Equivalence[1] that defined the outline of Category Theory was written by Saunders MacLane and Samuel Eilenberg.

Category Theory Online Tutorials

For starters, the following video series would be great starting points for people who wants to know more about Category Theory.

To obtain an orientation of Category Theory, the following 3 part Category Theory introductory video series by John Peloquin can be finished in 30 minutes.

An ideal starting point for learning Category Theory is to know its nature of being a pure declarative style of reasoning, in contrast to the imperative style of reasoning. It can also be understood as a global vs. local approach to prescribe concepts. Bartosz Milewski has a great video on this subject, please see Video/Declarative vs Imperative Approach.

Declarative vs. Imperative Reasoning
Concepts\Programming Style Imperative Declarative
Mathematical Semantics Algorithmic Sequence Category Theory
Scopes Local Global
Scientific Doctrines Classical Physics Quantum Physics
Scientific Doctrines Action-Reaction Stationary Action Principle
Analytical Modeling Newtonian Mechanics Lagrangian Mechanics
Infrastructure Automation Ansible Terraform


Richard Southwell

Richard Southwell has a youtube channel on many subjects about math, particularly having a long series on Category Theory.

Topos Institute

Topos Institute, founded by David Spivak and Brendan Fong, also has a youtube channel on Category Theory.

Topos institute publishes its lectures on Youtube, for example:

Toby St Clere Smithe has a talk at Topos Institute on: Compositional Active Inference: A “Process Theory” for Finding Right Abstractions

William Lawvere

{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZYGyEPXu8as%7C%7C%7C%7C%7C}}

References

  1. Samuel Eilenberg, Saunders MacLane, General Theory of Natural Equivalences, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society Vol. 58, No. 2 (Sep., 1945), pp. 231-294, American Mathematical Society, https://www.jstor.org/stable/1990284?seq=1