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by dkural
3882 days ago
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I did read the entire post. Isomorphisms and homomorphisms between groups also obey associativity, identity, can be composed etc - but there is no point to talking about the 'category of groups', as opposed to, simply, Group theory unless I somewhere use the fact that it's a category, in say, talking about the topological spaces, and the fundamental group etc. Did you read my comment? I claim that because something is associative and has identity, concepts clarified and used in the 19th century, is not sufficient motivation to bring about category theory. It's not used for anything in this article. |
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