Homotopy Type Theory UMyn8W7b (Rev #8, changes)

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The rational numbers are a Cauchy space and also a uniform space. They are also a vector space, and depending on which definition of limit is used, limits do exist for some rational sequences and nets, and so some infinitely-differentiable functions and analytic functions over the rational numbers exist. However, they are not Cauchy-complete.

Comment about school mathematics

The “functions” taught in school mathematics at many levels aren’t functions on a type TT as presented in type theory, but rather they are partial and/or multivalued “functions”, which are basically just spans on TT. In school algebra, the reciprocal function 1x\frac{1}{x} for x:Fx:F in a field FF is a partial function and the principal square root function x\sqrt{x} is partial. Many implicit functions are multivalued. In school calculus, the derivative x\frac{\partial}{\partial x} is a partial function on the function type \mathbb{R} \to \mathbb{R} because certain functions are nowhere-differentiable, and the antiderivative implicit function 1x 1\frac{\partial^{-1}}{\partial x^{-1}} is multivalued even for the zero function f(x)0f(x) \coloneqq 0.

Thus, in this particular context, I would rather prefer to use the homotopy theoretic terminology instead of the type theoretic terminology in many cases, i.e. the objects of the object theory are “spaces” rather than “types”, “points” rather than “terms”, “path spaces” rather than “identity types”, “mappings” rather than “functions”, “mapping spaces” rather than “function types”, and so forth.

Revision on March 22, 2022 at 13:53:22 by Anonymous?. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.