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by FillMaths
130 days ago
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You say that i is "the square root of -1", but which one is it? There are two. This is the point in the essay---we cannot tell the difference between i and -i unless we have already agreed on a choice of which square root of -1 we are going to call i. Only then does the other one become -i. How do we know that my i is the same as your i rather than your -i? To fix the coordinate structure of the complex numbers (a,b) is in effect to have made a choice of a particular i, and this is one of the perspectives discussed in the essay. But it is not the only perspective, since with that perspective complex conjugation should not count as an automorphism, as it doesn't respect the choice of i. |
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If you flip the plane and look at it from the bottom, then any formula written using GA operations is identical, but because you're seeing the oriented area of the pseudoscalar from behind, its as if it gains a minus sign in front.
This is equivalent to using a right-handed versus left-handed coordinate systems in 3D. The "rules of physics" remain the same either way, the labels we assign to the coordinate systems are just a convention.