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by spekcular
1956 days ago
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This does not answer my question. The material in the first book is all well-known. A standard reference is Reed and Simon's Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics. Categories don't gain you anything there, and in any case it's tangentially relevant to most work in harmonic analysis and probabiility. The second book is not relevant at all. Just because you can produce books on analysis where someone uses the word "category," does not mean a working mathematician ought to care. |
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Anyway, wouldn't it be nice to really understand, on some (higher, admittedly) level, what it is that you are actually doing? Functors and all...