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by iraqmtpizza
1036 days ago
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Other than the article using the word sphere incessantly, I don't see how any of this is limited to spheres. I don't see even once how uniform distance plays into this except that the sphere is the simplest version of the sorts of things they're talking about. Your failure to banish my suspicions despite effort makes me that much more confident in my original conclusion. also a hypercube is not a cube--it's an n-cube. otherwise this is just lazy pop science rhetoric to get the kids excited about their field (and eventually suppress wages in mathematics with their newly-supplied labor, degree in hand). except not even science, so even less important I understand that these objects are topologically equivalent to n-spheres, but that doesn't make them n-spheres, let alone spheres proper. In fact, you point out that cubes and spheres are topologically equivalent despite zero spheres being cubes and zero cubes being spheres. |
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Also, n-spheres are commonly just called spheres for brevity. So when I say “the fundamental problem of homotopy theory is to compute the homotopy groups of spheres,” I am referring to all homotopy groups of all (n-)spheres simultaneously.
> I don’t see how any of this is limited to spheres.
In fact you’re right, homotopy theory is not just limited to spheres! However, if we could readily compute the homotopy groups of spheres, then we would be able to compute the homotopy groups of any “reasonable space.” Here I’m referring to CW complexes [1] which are a very broad class of spaces that, up to homotopy equivalence, probably includes any space you care to think of. It is for this reason that the problem of computing the homotopy groups of spheres is so fundamental to homotopy theory more broadly.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CW_complex