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by ginnungagap
2608 days ago
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If you ask a mathematician a tensor is an element of a tensor product, just like a vector is an element of a vector space. This moves the question to "what is a tensor product", which you can think about as a way to turn bilinear maps into linear maps (this is an informal statement of the universal property of the tensor product, you also need a proof of existence of such an object, but it's easy for vector spaces and alright for modules after seeing enough algebra) |
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Reminds me of the time an algebraist mentioned to me that he was working on profinite group theory. I asked what a profinite group was, and he immediately replied 'an inverse limit of an inverse system', with no follow up. Well thanks buddy, that really opened my eyes.