Course details
A core MAGIC course
Semester
- Autumn 2020
- Monday, October 5th to Friday, December 11th
Hours
- Live lecture hours
- 10
- Recorded lecture hours
- 0
- Total advised study hours
- 40
Timetable
- Fridays
- 10:05 - 10:55 (UK)
Description
Category theory begins with the observation that the collection of mathematical objects of a given kind (groups, topological spaces, graphs, etc...) together with the appropriate mappings between them (group homomorphism, continuous function, graph morphism) is an interesting mathematical structure in its own right: a category.
Category theory, i.e. the study of categories, provides tools that can be applied uniformly to different kinds of mathematical structures and a convenient language to relate them precisely. This course will be an introduction to category theory. The main theme will be universal properties in their various manifestations, which is one of the most important uses of category theory in mathematics. Apart from introducing specific concepts and presenting the key results, one of the goals of the module is to teach you how to reason categorically.
Prerequisites
It will be useful to have taken an undergraduate course in group theory or commutative algebra or some other abstract algebra course.
I will try to illustrate notions with examples from different areas, but you may find it useful to come up with examples from your preferred areas.
I will try to illustrate notions with examples from different areas, but you may find it useful to come up with examples from your preferred areas.
Syllabus
- Categories and functors.
- Universal arrows.
- Natural transformations and functor categories.
- Colimits.
- Duality and limits.
- Adjunctions.
- Preservation of limits.
- Presheaves and the Yoneda lemma.
- Representables and limits
- Kan extensions.
Lecturer
-
NG
N. Gambino
- University
- University of Manchester
Bibliography
Follow the link for a book to take you to the relevant Google Book Search page
You may be able to preview the book there and see links to places where you can buy the book. There is also link marked 'Find this book in a library' - this sometimes works well, but not always - you will need to enter your location, but it will be saved after you do that for the first time.
Assessment
The assessment for this course will be released on Monday 11th January 2021 at 00:00 and is due in before Sunday 24th January 2021 at 23:59.
A take=home exam with questions, including possibly some open questions (i.e. whose answer is not just either correct or incorrect).
Please note that you are not registered for assessment on this course.
Files
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Lectures
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