PSA: Evan Chen’s “Infinitely Large Napkin” has gotta be one of the most important math books out there. It makes higher math incredibly accessible.

I can’t overstate how much it enabled me to do things that would otherwise only be reachable through years of studying pure mathematics at university.

https://web.evanchen.cc/napkin.html

The Napkin project is a personal exposition project of mine aimed at making higher math accessible to high school students. The philosophy is stated in the preamble:

I’ll be eating a quick lunch with some friends of mine who are still in high school. They’ll ask me what I’ve been up to the last few weeks, and I’ll tell them that I’ve been learning category theory. They’ll ask me what category theory is about. I tell them it’s about abstracting things by looking at just the structure-preserving morphisms between them, rather than the objects themselves. I’ll try to give them the standard example Gp, but then I’ll realize that they don’t know what a homomorphism is. So then I’ll start trying to explain what a homomorphism is, but then I’ll remember that they haven’t learned what a group is. So then I’ll start trying to explain what a group is, but by the time I finish writing the group axioms on my napkin, they’ve already forgotten why I was talking about groups in the first place. And then it’s 1PM, people need to go places, and I can’t help but think:

Man, if I had forty hours instead of forty minutes, I bet I could actually have explained this all.

This book is my attempt at those forty hours.

0

If you have a fediverse account, you can quote this note from your own instance. Search https://donotsta.re/objects/7d4afed8-3665-42cb-b410-c3d0056195f0 on your instance and quote it. (Note that quoting is not supported in Mastodon.)