tea.mathoverflow.net - Discussion Feed (Geometry vs. Metric Geometry)2018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/
Lussumo Vanilla & Feed Publisher
Joseph O'Rourke comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13261)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13261#Comment_132612011-02-12T11:23:27-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Joseph O'Rourkehttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/240/
@Greg: That is quite clarifying! I especially like the "map of communities" viewpoint. Thanks!
Greg Kuperberg comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13260)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13260#Comment_132602011-02-12T11:08:07-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Greg Kuperberghttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/39/
I think that I might be in a position to discuss the most literal version of the question. I was a member of the math advisory committee for the arXiv when that committee put together the list of ...
Note that arXiv categories are ideally a map of communities, or sometimes glued-together clusters of communities, of mathematicians. Is there an identifiable community of metric geometers, distinct from differential geometers? I think so; I think that it includes people like Robert Connelly, Karoly Boroczky, Tom Hales, etc. (And, not coincidentally, my dad.) I think it's fair to say that these people are in the same area as each other and not in the same area as Grigory Perelman and Chris Croke. Of course there is some overlap, occasionally a lot of overlap. arXiv categories aren't and can't be perfect; and to the extent that they could be entirely accurate, they are an open cover of research and not a tiling.
On the other hand, I think it's cool that the list of categories turned out to be reasonable enough that it is useful for a distinctly different system, Math Overflow, 12 years after it was drafted.
I also think that it's a bit limp to just label an MO question "geometry". Usually this label doesn't mean algebraic geometry or differential geometry; usually mg.metric-geometry is what is really meant.]]>
Bill Johnson comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13259)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13259#Comment_132592011-02-12T09:48:01-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Bill Johnsonhttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/133/
That one, Mark. It marked the beginning of the theory even if there were fragmentary results early, such as the Mazur map and Schoenberg's theorems.
Joseph O'Rourke comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13258)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13258#Comment_132582011-02-12T08:32:30-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Joseph O'Rourkehttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/240/
Thanks everyone for your comments! What for me started as a narrow question concerning how to tag my MO questions has turned into a highly informative discussion on the varieties of geometry. I ...
Mark Meckes comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13257)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13257#Comment_132572011-02-12T06:50:25-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Mark Meckeshttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/132/
@Bill: given that Elon was born in 1970, that would be beyond precocious!
Did you have a specific paper in mind, maybe "On nonlinear projections on Banach spaces"?
@Bill: given that Elon was born in 1970, that would be beyond precocious!
Did you have a specific paper in mind, maybe "On nonlinear projections on Banach spaces"?
]]>
Bill Johnson comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13252)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13252#Comment_132522011-02-12T01:30:46-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Bill Johnsonhttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/133/
Discrete metric geometry, which is an outgrowth of the local (meaning finite dimensional) geometry of Banach spaces, has become quite fashionable, in part because of its use in the design of ...
http://www.newton.ac.uk/programmes/DAN/index.html
Discrete and continuous metric geometry are the topics of a program at MSRI in the fall:
http://www.msri.org/web/msri/scientific/programs
As Deane mentioned, the continuous part got an impetus from Gromov, but in fact the flat continuous part (that is, the metric geometry of Banach spaces) was started by Lindenstrauss in 1964. (Joram; not Elon, who was not that precocious).]]>
deane.yang comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13249)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13249#Comment_132492011-02-11T21:01:57-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00deane.yanghttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/9/
The link Kevin gave does describe metric geometry reasonably well. But still a question like "what is metric geometry and where did it come from?" seems like a reasonable thing to ...
Kevin Lin comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13248)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13248#Comment_132482011-02-11T20:35:39-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Kevin Linhttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/25/
See this:
http://front.math.ucdavis.edu/categories/math
See this:
http://front.math.ucdavis.edu/categories/math
]]>
sean tilson comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13247)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13247#Comment_132472011-02-11T20:06:08-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00sean tilsonhttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/191/
I can think of one question where geometry is a more appropriate tag than any of the above mentioned ones:http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20383/categories-of-geometry/I only know because at the ...
http://mathoverflow.net/questions/20383/categories-of-geometry/
I only know because at the time it was the only MO question I felt comfortable answering. If it was posted now it certainly would be closed as being off topic, and rightly so.
(I the above is just to give an example, I think it would be unfortunate if this question were to become active again.)]]>
Ryan Budney comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13246)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13246#Comment_132462011-02-11T19:02:18-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Ryan Budneyhttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/
I doubt your question is ever really going to be settled, even if there is a policy decision made in this thread. Geometry is a word that is used so loosely in mathematics by so many different ...
Sorry for being kind of negative.]]>
Joseph O'Rourke comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13245)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13245#Comment_132452011-02-11T18:06:35-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Joseph O'Rourkehttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/240/
Thanks for the clarifications. I guess what confuses me is that most of differential geometry (certainly Riemannian geometry, even pseudo-Riemannian geometry and Finsler geometry), has a metric, and ...
to follow the appropriate MO convention. Maybe a better question is this: What type of question should be classified as _geometry_ (as opposed to metric-, Riemannian-, differential-, Euclidean-, symplectic-, etc.)?]]>
Ben Webster comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13244)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13244#Comment_132442011-02-11T17:24:20-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Ben Websterhttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/21/
Joseph-
Look at the arXiv headings: there's Algebraic Geometry, Differential Geometry and Symplectic Geometry, all different from Metric Geometry.
Joseph-
Look at the arXiv headings: there's Algebraic Geometry, Differential Geometry and Symplectic Geometry, all different from Metric Geometry.
]]>
Ryan Budney comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13243)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13243#Comment_132432011-02-11T16:57:16-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Ryan Budneyhttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/
Building on Qiaochu's thread of ideas: manifolds tend to be given various structures corresponding to various structure groups -- symplectic structures, conformal structures, volume structures, ...
Qiaochu Yuan comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13242)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13242#Comment_132422011-02-11T16:46:58-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Qiaochu Yuanhttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/13/
Conformal geometry is non-metric geometry, right?
Conformal geometry is non-metric geometry, right?
]]>
Joseph O'Rourke comments on "Geometry vs. Metric Geometry" (13241)http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/957/geometry-vs-metric-geometry/?Focus=13241#Comment_132412011-02-11T16:41:26-08:002018-11-04T23:21:52-08:00Joseph O'Rourkehttp://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/240/
Could someone please distinguish for me the difference between the tags "geometry" and "metric geometry"? I fear I have not been classifying questions ...