Dear David, Thank you for your very kind offer. There are, at least, two reasons for which I'll have to think about it before I give an answer. 1- You say, I quote you: "the input is no harder than writing in (La)TeX." This seems to be very simple for you, but considering my very limited ability with computers (and this is an understatement) it will probably be almost impossible for me. For example I cannot type (La) TeX. If I need to have a text typed in TeX, I have to ask to a friend to type it for me. This is one of the reasons why I publish very little although I have many handwritten first drafts on various subjects in Category Theory. 2- Even assuming the friend would help me, the nLab is a wiki system, thus anybody would be able to modify my texts. And I'm sure I wouldn't like that. I'm not against discussion and I wouldn't object if one or many persons wrote their own texts, even if they are very critical of mine, provided they give mathematical arguments to justify their objections. You might suggest solutions to 1 and 2, in which case I'd gladly accept your offer. Thanks again, and best regards, Jean Le 13 janv. 11 à 02:37, David Roberts a écrit :
On 12 January 2011 17:20, JeanBenabou <jean.benabou@wanadoo.fr> wrote:
Thus the official list does not permit such discussions. Can anybody tell me where they can take place publicly?
Dear Jean,
you (and all other categories list readers) are welcome to add as much material on category theory of any sort as you see fit to the nLab.
http://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/HomePage
the input is no harder than writing in (La)TeX. For example, the page
http://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/Grothendieck+fibration
deals with fibrations from several different points of view, but if you see fit to expand it, I (and I assume others) would be very pleased.
Or you could start some new topics at
http://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/Jean+Benabou
and I'm sure the nLab regulars will pitch in and lend a hand. As far as actively discussing these ideas go, there is the nForum
http://www.math.ntnu.no/~stacey/Mathforge/nForum/
where it is a simple matter to sign up. In all events, the discussions there are public and open for all to read.
Best wishes, and good luck for what sounds like a very interesting lecture,
David Roberts
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