Not signed in (Sign In)

Vanilla 1.1.9 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.

  1.  
    Harry---I know you read meta and I don't know of any other way to contact you. You asked a question on MO a few hours ago about Bruhat decomposition, and also asking whether there were intrinsic (co-ordinate free) definitions of a Borel subgroup in GL_n. I made a comment, containing some references where you could read a proof of Bruhat decomposition (I was guessing because I was at home and my books were at work so the references were not precise, but I've checked a couple of them now and indeed they're there), and giving you two conceptual definitions of a Borel subgroup (max connected solvable subgroup; min parabolic). I also made a cheeky comment about how you typically downvote questions for which the answers are readily available in standard places :-) but I did not downvote your question.

    You then proceeded to delete the question entirely, taking my comment with it.

    I don't write these comments/answers for fun. I write them for the benefit of the mathematical community. Now you've made it clear that you might remove them for no apparent reason at any point, I am highly minded not to answer or comment upon any further questions you may ask, for fear I'll be wasting my time.

    I would have told you this by email but you don't give any contact details so I have to tell you here in this public forum. On the other hand, seeing as you seem to be inspired by and actively invoke this sort of daft controversy (e.g. in the Grothendieck letter thread on the wordpress blog you advocate beating Grothendieck up, a comment surely only made precisely for troll purposes), no doubt this won't bother you much.

    Kevin
  2.  
    Dear Kevin,

    By virtue of my reputation, I can still see Harry Gindi's question and your answer. I agree that there was no reason to delete it. (I also think that your comment may be a little too cheeky, although I well understand the temptation.) I have cast an "undelete" vote to bring this question back. (Two more undelete votes are needed, and as yet there aren't so many people who can cast them.)

    Sometimes Harry has deleted his answers in a way that frustrates me too. If you type in an answer, don't get much response to it except a brief explanation of its incorrectness and/or a few downvotes, then it's reasonable to delete it. However, often with Harry it takes some convincing that his answers are wrong: once he ignored my simple counterexample and insisted on quoting a result from Grothendieck's _Topological Vector Spaces_. So I had to get a copy of this book, look up the exact result in question and point out where Grothendieck was using a hypothesis (completeness of the normed ground field) that I had earlier explicitly stated that I was not assuming. After this sunk in, he deleted the answer. I also feel like my time was wasted.

    I will say that I don't think that Harry is a troll in the sense that you are describing. I think he has shown his sincere desire to ask and answer questions (and some of his questions are quite good, by the way). The problem is that he seems to lack self-control and a sense of what is appropriate adult discourse. It seems rather that the only way to correct his behavior is to call him out on it on a case-by-case basis, which is certainly a tiresome state of affairs -- ask the moderators.
  3.  

    Maybe we should have a more general discussion about deletion etiquette. I certainly agree that if there is something to learn for other viewers of a question or answer, it shouldn't be deleted, even if that something is, for example, a potential strategy for answering a question that fails in an instructive way. Anyway, I've voted to undelete the question.

    • CommentAuthorHarry Gindi
    • CommentTimeFeb 16th 2010 edited
     
    I was under the impression that you didn't want me to keep the question up, buzzard. Because it had received no votes, no answers, and no comments aside from yours (which I thought was in favor of deletion), I deleted the question. Did you actually post an answer? I only saw your comment.

    Also, the _joke_ I made about beating Grothendieck up was clearly a joke. You may agree with the other people on SBS that it was in bad taste, but I don't think that I am purposely trying to annoy people.

    Also, Pete, shouldn't incorrect answers be deleted? We both know that you corrected me and that I was mistaken (meanwhile, the assumption of completeness of the base field wasn't stated in the result I found, it was at the beginning of the chapter or the section, if I remember correctly. This doesn't mean I wasn't incorrect, just that I'm not a _complete_ jerk who didn't read the question [only a partial jerk who went straight to the result without reading the caveats].).

    Edit: And when someone makes a comment like that, I try to delete the question or vote to close it, because it distracts from the issue at hand and turns the thread into a thread about me. Here's an example of a comment ruining a question: http://mathoverflow.net/questions/12765/algebraic-stacks-from-scratch .
  4.  
    I only posted the comment (not an answer), but when I got to work I looked up some references for Bruhat decomposition for you, to make my comment better, and when I sat down and attempted to post them I couldn't find the question any more. I'm not "bothered" by this, I just think that your actions are a bit crazy and it (genuinely) scares me off answering your questions in the future.

    I imagine that talking about maths is forbidden on meta, but because I have nowhere else to put these thoughts I put them here anyway.

    I suggested Borel's book but he works in big generality and probably doesn't do what you want (section 14.12). I suggested Platonov-Rapinchuk but they seem to state the result without proof. On the other hand Knapp's book "the representation theory of semisimple groups" might contain just what you're after. His proof (for SL_n(R) but the same ideas work for GL_n) is on p127 and completely explicit, involving keeping track of which minors are vanishing basically. HTH!

    Thanks at least for giving me some sort of forum in which to offer you an answer to the question ;-)

    Kevin
  5.  

    Harry said, "Also, Pete, shouldn't incorrect answers be deleted?"

    It sounds cheesy, but we learn more from failure than success! Remember that questions and answers on MO are not just for you, but for future generations of mathematicians. Some of the best learning is done from the sort of Socratic exchange you had with Pete---and it's good learning even for we observers.

  6.  

    Going on the assumption that fpqc would undelete if he could, I've voted to undelete. http://mathoverflow.net/questions/15438/a-slick-proof-of-the-bruhat-decomposition-for-glnk

    In general, I agree that you shouldn't delete stuff unless there's a very good reason to do so. In particular, I think we should leave up answers that turn out to be wrong if they have any interesting content. But in this case, I think the deletion might have been justified. If you post a question and one of the first responses is the comment "Did you check [obvious resource you should have thought to check]?" and you haven't, then I think it's okay to delete the question. Once you look at that resource, you should come back and improve the question by incorporating whatever you learned. If you learned nothing, at least say that you checked. If you completely answered the question, I guess you should just leave it deleted.

    The point is that if you happen to post a half-baked question, it's best to delete it quickly until it's fully baked. If you post a half-baked question and it gets answers, then I think you should leave it up and just do your best to make it reasonable. Really, you should try very hard not to post half-baked questions, but sometimes they happen.

    • CommentAuthorHarry Gindi
    • CommentTimeFeb 16th 2010 edited
     
    @Tom: It has been suggested in the past to me that wrong answers should be deleted. I'm fine with any decision the community makes, but could we have some sort of agreed upon course of action?
  7.  
    @Tom: I have deleted my own incorrect answers on a few occasions. Usually this was because they were embarrassingly or (to another person) obviously wrong, and these answers served no purpose to others. One reason for their fleeting existence: it's frequently easier to misread questions on MO than it is to misinterpret more formal instances of mathematical discourse. Because of these factors, the ability to delete answers also makes it likelier that a quick answer will be provided to more esoteric (w/r/t MO) questions.
  8.  

    @Tom: I agree, but answers that are seriously misguided, and not in an instructive way, should still be deleted. Not that this applies in the present situation, as far as I know – but so long as we are stating general principles.

    • CommentAuthorHarry Gindi
    • CommentTimeFeb 16th 2010 edited
     
    Anyway, now that I think about it, the question is still alright, mainly because it's asking for slick proofs rather than standard proofs. As we saw in the other slick proof question I asked, the only standard reference on the subject had a very long and convoluted proof, while an MOer was able to prove it in several lines.
  9.  
    I think there are 2 issues here, which should probably be dealt with separately.
    1) Deleting "wrong" questions/answers/comments.
    2) Deleting stuff other people have contributed to in the form of answers/comments/edits.
    I suppose the first can be decided on the basis of how wrong the post is and whether the "mistake" has educational value. But in the interest of common decency and respect for other people's time and effort, I guess one should refrain from deleting unilaterally. It could be okay to delete after the OP has asked everyone who has responded.
    • CommentAuthorHarry Gindi
    • CommentTimeFeb 16th 2010 edited
     
    Anyway, as I'd pointed out earlier, instead of the question being taken seriously, people are just voting up Kevin Buzzard's remark. Please, people, I'd appreciate it if you don't leave comments like that on my questions. I will put contact information on my userpage, and if anyone would like to leave such a comment, please just contact me. I have a mind to just delete the question now, because it's now just people voting on "how much of a hypocrite fpqc is" (I'm not, but the way the comment is worded, it appears to be calling me out for being just that. The problem is, if you're new to a field, or if you know nothing about a field, you don't even know what the standard references are. Especially, in this case, because the problem is stated completely in classical linear-algebra terms. In fact, it doesn't make use of any topological or differentiable structure of GL_n [for the decomposition exists over all fields {or at least over those of characteristic zero, although I don't remember precisely}]. Perhaps it would have been better filed under _matrix groups_ or _linear algebraic groups_.)
    • CommentAuthorMariano
    • CommentTimeFeb 16th 2010
     

    The question was looked upon by 67 seven people as of now and Kevin's comment has all of 5 votes. Have you considered the possibility that no one (among those 67 people) knows of a slick proof?

    So much drama connected to a question is among the best demotivators ever.

    • CommentAuthorbbischof
    • CommentTimeFeb 16th 2010
     
    Not to threadjack, but this brings me to a question I wanted to ask Qiaochu.

    Should I delete my recent question about ramification?

    I posted this question fairly late at night after being frustrated at my stupidity at finding that result. Now I look at the question and think that it is entirely pointless. Qiaochu is the only one to respond at all, and all he said was that my proof was fine. I do appreciate him taking the time to check it over, but I kinda feel dumb for posting this question in the first place. Combined with my stupidity on asking the question recently about subobject classifiers(btw there is a counter example given in the BOOK i WAS READING!), I feel pretty silly in general on MO right now. Essentially, I just wanted to make sure people (Qiaochu) wouldn't be bothered by this deletion.

    P.S. Sorry again for threadjacking.
  10.  

    I don't think it matters much either way. The question isn't even on the front page anymore, right?

    • CommentAuthorbbischof
    • CommentTimeFeb 16th 2010
     
    I don't think so.
  11.  

    To reiterate my earlier point, what's the point of deleting it? What if somebody comes along someday and adds a meaningful comment? What if a future student Googles ramification and, coming across your question, has a flash of insight?

  12.  
    I agree with Tom. Once a question gets an answer, I think that it is appropriate and respectful to leave it up. (So far as I know, deleting an upvoted question could even lead to a loss of reputation after a rep recalc. But I'm not sure about this, and it's not my main point.)

    As a more personal statement, I think it is very important to be able to get over one's embarrassment about asking "stupid questions": if not completely, then enough so that one is willing to ask them much of the time. Most of the leading mathematicians I know are willing to reveal a little ignorance in order to increase their knowledge.
  13.  

    I would like to "clean up" this question -- deleting Kevin's, fpqc's and both of Qaiochu's comments, as well as the last two questions of the question. This would leave the page with purely mathematical content.

    What do people think? (Please, those involved, don't act unilaterally -- it would be best all at once or not at all.)

  14.  

    I have just "cleaned up" this question. In particular I deleted two paragraphs of fpqc's question, and some comments. All are preserved below for posterity.


    Edit: I take issue with Kevin Buzzard's comment mainly for the last line. It makes me look like a jerk and a hypocrite, but that's not a fair characterization. First of all, I've already proven this. I was asking for a better proof. That's more "due diligence" than any question I've voted down for being in a standard reference can claim. Additionally, how can you honestly expect someone who's never seen the term "reductive group" before to be familiar with the references? I searched for something like proof of Bruhat Decomposition of GL_n on Google, Google books, and Wikipedia and was not able to find a reference. Granted, the last time I searched for it was right after the exam (probably a little less than a year ago), but that still doesn't mean that I failed to fulfill the necessary prerequisites for asking a question on MO.

    I feel like people have a knee-jerk response whenever they see me on MO, and I don't think many people here are willing to give me the benefit of the doubt. However, I think I hold myself to the same standards I hold other people to, and I find it in bad taste for someone to challenge my integrity like that. I'd rather delete questions that have accusations like that than have to deal with them like this, because it's embarrassing that I have to keep doing things like this. I don't want to stand out as a whiner, but there are certain accusations that I have to respond to.


    9

    Open any book on representation theory of reductive groups? shrug Not an answer, but definitely what I would do. Did you try this? Is it in Borel/Humphreys/Jantzen/Platonov-Rapinchuk/Springer? The answer to your other question is "yes" though: a Borel subgroup is a maximal connected solvable subgroup, or a minimal parabolic, and P is parabolic if G/P is projective. A Weyl group is N(T)/T where T is a maximal torus and you could definitely find that in Borel/Springer/Humphreys... . Don't you usually vote down questions that can be trivially answered using standard references? ;-) – Kevin Buzzard 21 hours ago

    You're hitting me with all of these words. I asked a linear algebra question. How does this have to do with anything you said? It's not really fair to assume someone is familiar enough with reductive groups to know the standard references on them. – fpqc 8 hours ago

    @fpqc: your first, second, and fourth sentences are fair, but your third isn't. Kevin's comment describes a generalization of the situation for GL(V) to a much more general class of groups and what he is saying is extremely relevant to the question you're asking (especially the last one). – Qiaochu Yuan 3 hours ago 4

    @fpqc: in particular, I think Kevin's response is perfectly reasonable in light of your explicit request for "more machinery." – Qiaochu Yuan 2 hours ago

    • CommentAuthorJonas Meyer
    • CommentTimeFeb 16th 2010 edited
     
    Now the first parts of Allen Knutson's and Peter McNamara's answers may be confusing. I'm not saying that's a problem, just wanted to point it out.
    • CommentAuthorHarry Gindi
    • CommentTimeFeb 17th 2010 edited
     
    @Kevin Buzzard: I'd just like to make it clear that I wasn't upset with you when I made that edit. I was upset with (some of) the people who voted up your comment for no reason other than because they thought you had something nasty to say (which I don't think you did). The same thing happened in a recent question, where Emerton made a similar statement. There are people here who are happy just to see me told off. I know you didn't mean anything by it.

    @Everyone: However, I'd like to deal with this claim that I've voted people down in the past simply for missing something in a standard reference. This is not true. I have voted people down who clearly made no effort to find an answer. There's a certain type of post that I'm talking about, and I think that many if not most people agree with me on that sort of thing. It's clear that I at least made an effort. If someone wants to dispute this, we can discuss it on meta, but please don't poison the waters anymore by leaving comments like that.
  15.  

    I would like to sound a slightly dissonant note in this discussion. I do think that it is perfectly acceptable behaviour for someone to delete a question even after it has gained some useful answers, or to delete an answer.

    My reason for this is that, as I've said before, MO is primarily a place for people to obtain answers to questions. If someone is no longer interested in obtaining an answer, then there is really little to be gained from answering it. This ties in neatly with the recent SBS post that tried to resurrect some ancient questions. One of those is vaguely interesting to me, but there are lots of questions that are "vaguely interesting" to me, and I only have a limited amount of time so before I think about it, I'd like to know who's really interested in having an answer. The only person who's interest I can really judge is the person who originally asked the question - people voting for a question doesn't give much indication as to how interested they are; do they mean that they, too, came across this question in their research? Or just that it sounds like a nice question to know the answer to?

    An example that I recently heard makes this point very well. It was motivating a course in the technology of water systems. There were lots of pictures of consequences of pipe bursts: cars disappearing in Oslo and the like, but it was only when the person said that 50% of all water pipes in Trondheim (where I live!) are below standard that I realised that Yes, this was a very interesting subject!

    To emphasise my point, I don't think that we should think of MO as building up a stock of answers for future generations of mathematicians to search through. The extent to which this happens is a happy by-product (I'd be interested to know how much this does actually happen). Rather, MO's focus should be on the immediate: I want an answer to this question at this time. That's its strength, it should play to it.

    Of course, I sympathise with Kevin that he did some extra work and was frustrated that it went to waste. Unfortunately, that's the deal with MO. But there are other options available. He could ask-and-answer his own question. He could write a blog post about it. He could make a page on some convenient wiki about it.

    MO is primarily about dialogue, not monologue and not soliloquy (monologues can have audiences). If one party to the dialogue decides - for whatever reason - that this isn't a conversation that they want to participate in at this time, then the dialogue ceases. There are better places for monologues and soliloquies.

    • CommentAuthorMariano
    • CommentTimeFeb 17th 2010 edited
     

    Of course, I sympathise with Kevin that he did some extra work and was frustrated that it went to waste. Unfortunately, that's the deal with MO. But there are other options available. He could ask-and-answer his own question. He could write a blog post about it. He could make a page on some convenient wiki about it.

    He could do all that and many other things. But he had already done something.

    I, for one, will probably not consider considering a question asked by someone with a tendency to delete other people's work...

    Rather, MO's focus should be on the immediate: I want an answer to this question at this time. That's its strength, it should play to it.

    If that's the focus it should have, then I guess I'll grow bored very, very fast with the site. Your description makes it sound a lot like a math twitter, really!

    I really doubt the motivation behind what I consider the best parts of MO are anywhere near the focus nicely captured by the "I want an answer to this question at this time" mantra, bold and all, especially on the answering side. I know for sure that my little part was most certainly not oriented towards that.

  16.  

    MO is primarily about dialogue, not monologue and not soliloquy (monologues can have audiences). If one party to the dialogue decides - for whatever reason - that this isn't a conversation that they want to participate in at this time, then the dialogue ceases. – Andrew Stacey

    Uh, but what about multilogue, for lack of a better word? If it's all about dialogue, why not use email? Think of a discussion around the blackboard in the commons room attracting three or four participants. Then the one who started the discussion decides he's tired of it, erases the blackboard in the midst of discussion and leaves. I for one would not be pleased if it were my calculations he just wiped out.

  17.  

    Well there is no lack of a better word. The dia in dialogue comes from the latin meaning something like through. There can be as many participants in a dialogue as you like. But I digress...

  18.  

    I also disagree with Andrew. One of the great things about MO is that our conversations are permanent and searchable. We are already getting questions that can be answered by pointing to a previous question, and this will become more true as time goes on.

  19.  

    @Grétar: Thanks for the language lesson.

  20.  

    You're welcome, although on reading what I wrote again I think I might have come off a bit smug. If so I apologize :)

  21.  

    You misunderstand me a little, though reading my first paragraph again I would qualify it a little by adding the phrase "... though I would rather people saw deletion as the last resort than the first.".

    I was contrasting "dialogue" with "monologue" (and soliloquy). Of course, dialogues can have more than two participants. The point being that they have at least two. Before posting an answer, I'd like to be sure that at least one person is going to read what I write. The only person I can be reasonably sure of is the person who asked the question (which is why I also want to know far more background than is usually given in questions to know whether or not what I write is close to what the person wanted). So if that person is no longer interested in the answer, then I'd like to know that. I will agree that deletion is possibly quite a strong way of sending this message, but I can also see that someone wouldn't like to have their name attached to a question that later turned out to be a bit silly.

    If, in the meantime, other people have joined the dialogue then there is a case to be made for keeping the question alive. But if the original asker is no longer interested, it seems more logical for one of the new participants to repost the question - essentially claiming it for them - than to force the original asker to ask a question against their will. (I suspect that under the stated license, MO has the right to force the original asker to ask their question against their will, but that's a side issue.) That's why I said that Kevin, perhaps, should have asked-and-answered his own question if he felt that his work should not be lost to posterity. Please note, though, that what he had actually posted was a comment with suggestions on where to look. It was only later that Kevin did the substantial work and then couldn't find anywhere to write it. So he hadn't actually lost a significant posting.

    To specifics:

    @Mariano:

    But he had already done something.

    But he had not done anything significant. He had posted a comment. Comments are, by their very nature, not as important as answers. I certainly wouldn't consider anything in a comment reason enough to keep a bad answer/question. Putting something in a comment signifies that you don't view it as all that important since comments are often skimmed and only a small number are viewable.

    Your description makes it sound a lot like a math twitter, really!

    What's twitter?

    I know for sure that my little part was most certainly not oriented towards that.

    I could pick apart the whole of that section, but let me concentrate on this sentence. Why do you take part in MO? You are one of the higher rep people so I'm curious. I take part to help people, or to try to. Every now and then I try to get people to help me, but without overmuch success. But, as I've been trying to say, in order to help, I need to know that the other person still needs help and wants the kind of help that I can give.

    @hanche:

    erases the blackboard in the midst of discussion and leaves

    For a start, someone sneakily keeps taking pictures of the blackboard so that it can be restored if needed. Secondly, 'fraid that's a snag with using blackboards! They get erased. If you want your work to be more permanent, put it on a wiki somewhere and make sure it's linked from all surrounding topics.

    As we've seen, deletion is not permanent. And in this particular case, the blackboard wasn't filled with lots of calculations from lots of different people.

    @David: I think you missed my point about primary purpose versus by-product. If you want to store up a database of useful bits of mathematical knowledge, MO certainly isn't the best way to do it. That this happens is inevitable, but to say that a question should be preserved because of some vague future benefit seems illogical. Who knows, maybe tomorrow there'll be a new Lurie paper explaining why the Bruhat decomposition is all a simply consequence of (infinty,38)-categories. If something is obviously worth preserving, then it's worth preserving somewhere better than the MO database.

    • CommentAuthorHarry Gindi
    • CommentTimeFeb 17th 2010 edited
     
    I took Dr. Buzzard's comment to mean that he supported deletion (or at least that he didn't think it was a good question). He had not posted an answer, and I thought that he was reprimanding me. I wrote down his book suggestions though. My point is, if it was a bad enough post to leave a comment like that, why would I expect that he was planning on answering it?
  22.  

    A technical question: So if I answered a question and it is then deleted, can I still see my answer from my list of answers?

  23.  
    I'm pretty sure that if the question has _answers_ rather than comments, you cannot delete it. Although, the answer might need to have at least one vote up.
  24.  
    By virtue of my recent ascension to MO-demigod status, I can see all deleted questions and answers. (This is by far the best perk of having >= 10K rep, as far as I am concerned.) I can see at least one example of a deleted question to which several answers have been given. I did not find an example of a deleted question which has been "answered" in the technical MO sense, i.e., an answer has been given with a positive vote-count. It is a reasonable conjecture that it is not possible to delete such a question, and I agree that it should not be possible. Thus the present state of affairs seems to be a little better than I had realized.

    I (still) respectfully disagree with Andrew Stacey: much of the point of restricting to "appropriate" questions on MO is that it is precisely these questions which we feel are of interest to the larger community and not just to the person who asked them. And I think that MO as a repository of good questions and good answers is something that, in the limit, will become more valuable than the ability to use MO to get any single question answered.
    • CommentAuthorHarry Gindi
    • CommentTimeFeb 17th 2010 edited
     
    I just checked this: If a question has one answer with one vote on it, you cannot delete it.
  25.  
    @fpqc: if there's just one vote, you can downvote it yourself, then delete. I've done that.
    • CommentAuthorHarry Gindi
    • CommentTimeFeb 17th 2010 edited
     
    I wasn't trying to delete it. I was testing it because Pete was curious.