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Questions that are about research in mathematics, or about the job of a research mathematician, without being mathematical problems or statements in the strictest sense. Do not use this tag for easy or supposedly easy mathematical questions.

8 votes

Are there situations when regarding isomorphic objects as identical leads to mistakes?

Expanding on Andy Putman's comment, beginners in linear algebra often think of all finite-dimensional vector spaces (over $\mathbb{R}$, say) as the same, in particular as $\mathbb{R}^n$ with the stand …
Qiaochu Yuan's user avatar
9 votes

Learning new mathematics

I read blog posts about it and then I blog about it. The main thing this does is supplement reading a textbook, especially one that doesn't provide motivation or connection with other branches of mat …
Qiaochu Yuan's user avatar
28 votes

Memorizing theorems

The only way I ever really understand a theorem is by blogging about it; this is what I did with the Polya Enumeration Theorem, for example, whose proof I hadn't followed very closely in my algebraic …
1 vote

Between abstract and concrete: What's the right way to think of specific categories?

Position 2 is only tenable because the categories you describe automatically come with forgetful functors to $\text{Set}$. But in order to think about more general categories (say, homotopy categorie …
Qiaochu Yuan's user avatar
5 votes

Problems where we can't make a canonical choice, solved by looking at all choices at once

Here's a basic but important example. In the modern approach to things like algebra we study objects like groups and rings in two stages: first we study their abstract structure, then we study their …
4 votes

Most helpful heuristic?

A sort-of heuristic in combinatorics is that if you can't figure out what to do with a set, take the free abelian group / vector space on that set and work with linear transformations instead of funct …
35 votes

What should be offered in undergraduate mathematics that's currently not (or isn't usually)?

I think undergraduates should take problem-solving classes. I don't think such classes are widely available, but bright students who didn't do a lot of problem-solving in high school would definitely …
6 votes

Learning to Think Categorically

My own personal exposure to category theory mostly consists of reading the following blog entries: The entire beginning of The Unapologetic Mathematician, Todd Trimble's series on basic category the …
5 votes

Categorification request

There are related examples at this MO question, but most power series identities can be categorified to natural isomorphisms between combinatorial species, which are functors $\text{FinSet}_0 \to \tex …
Qiaochu Yuan's user avatar
4 votes

How can I really motivate the Zariski topology on a scheme?

Here's an idea related to Tim Carstens' answer. As in Ben's answer we start from the point of view that it makes sense to think of $\text{Spec } R$ as a set. Given an ideal $I$ we have a homomorphis …
Qiaochu Yuan's user avatar
20 votes

How to mentor an exceptional high school student?

Tell him about his other opportunities (although perhaps being on AoPS he is already aware of them). Summer programs like Ross PROMYS the Canada/USA Mathcamp HCSSiM and others come highly recomme …
18 votes

Particular problem solved by solving a more general problem.

Frequently in mathematics the best way to determine the value of a sequence at a particular index is to compute its value at every index, even though the latter seems on the surface like a harder prob …
12 votes

Theorems with unexpected conclusions

Here's one I was reminded of recently. Recall that a projective plane is a triple $(P, L, I)$ where $P$ is a set of "points," $L$ is a set of "lines," and $I$ is a subset of $P \times L$ describing t …
17 votes

Most harmful heuristic?

Also not really a heuristic, but "differentiation is easy," as encoded in the following two sub-heuristics: Differentiation is just repeated application of the product and chain rules, and Most func …
20 votes

What are some examples of colorful language in serious mathematics papers?

I always liked Edward Burger's A Tail of Two Palindromes. It begins as follows: Upon a preliminary perusal, this parable may appear to be about pairs of palindromes, periods, and pitiful alliteration …

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