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by gugagore
654 days ago
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By the way, I love your blog post https://alexkritchevsky.com/2024/02/28/geometric-algebra.htm... I didn't understand this part: > I strongly believe that if GA would make this distinction they would lose a lot fewer people. It is a completely interesting and useful thing to talk about “a representation of a particular class of operations that makes composition and inversion easy”, and completely offputting when you blur the distinction between operators and geometric objects themselves, and write every operation in terms of the geometric product when only a few of them are really compositions of operators. I can't tell what "a few of them" refers to. What is this potential distinction between operators and geometric objects? Sounds like the the distinction between a group action and a group object? I am willing to believe that GA is an unnecessary renaming of other simpler things, and also that it has these kind of culty vibes, but I'm focusing on the claim that (I understood as) "unifying the operators and geometric objects" is a bad feature rather than a good feature. |
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What I am getting at is that if you go read, say, the Doran/Lasenby book, they start out talking about multivectors for areas and volumes and etc---and they do all this with the GP. Which makes no sense! Ever calculation they do leaves you think "huh?" The GP makes no sense at all if you're talking about units of length, area, volume, etc. Its transformation laws, its composition laws... you end up having to undo it all afterwards with a bunch of janky other operations.
But if you talk about the GP for composing reflections to make rotations, it's fine, that makes sense. I just really want this distinction to be made more clearly. I'm only interested in the GP when it corresponds to an explicit geometric operation. Nobody makes this distinction as clear as I want; I hope to eventually find a really sound version of the argument and then write it out as another article.
Roughly speaking it's equivalent to conflating the sense of a complex number as a vector with a complex number as an operator on vectors. Yes, they're isomorphic, but given a vector in R^2 there's no intrinsic sense in which you should be able to interpret it as also being the operation of multiplying by r e^(iθ) on other vectors. Pretending like they're the same thing is just bewildering: that identification between vectors and operations should be something you have to explicitly construct. For starters, if you change bases for (x,y) the vector should rotate but the rotation operation shouldn't change. That sort of thing. GA is making this same confusion but on a larger scale.