nLab
About

Contents

History

The nLab is a collaborative wiki. It grew out of the desire (I, II) to have a place for development (the “Lab” in “nLab”) and indexed archives of the ideas and concepts surrounding the discussions at the The n-Category Café. These discussions primarily are about mathematics, physics and philosophy from the perspective of category theory and higher category theory (the “n” in “nLab” and nPOV).

The nLab was created in November 2008 using software provided and set up by Jacques Distler. The name “nLab” (short for “n-Category Lab”, but perhaps less restrictive) was dreamt up by Lisa Raphals (John Baez’s wife).

The nLab itself spun off the n-Forum for discussion about the nLab that doesn't fit well here.

Technology behind the nLab

The site is running Jacques Distler’s Instiki. To see the content correctly, you need to be running a MathML-capable browser. See HowTo for more on that.

The site is served using apache and Phusion Passenger. It is hosted on a 1Gb Virtual Private Server, running Ubuntu Linux, from Rails Playground.

What the nLab is

The most apt analogy for the nLab is of a group lab book. A lab book for a research scientist is a place where they write down anything that they consider relevant for their work; a group lab book is one that several researchers with common interests use. The material recorded in a lab book can include:

  • Notes from seminars
  • Notes from papers and books
  • Summaries of known work
  • Observations and results from experiments
  • Ideas for future work

Apart from not having actual physical experiments, this matches the content of the nLab fairly well. The key difference between the nLab and an “ordinary” lab book is that it is public. By making it public we hope to achieve two things:

  1. To enable others to benefit from our work while it is still being done.
  2. To benefit from the work of others while we are doing it.

There is much more to a research project than that which appears in the final paper and we believe that since our results and our final proofs will be public, then both we and those who might read such a paper can benefit from beginning the interaction much earlier in its development.

Thus by making our lab book public, we hope that casual passers-by will stop, read, and scribble something on it that will help us do our research.

There are three things to say about this that are worth making very clear.

  1. Our reasons for having the nLab are ultimately selfish. We have set it up and run it to make it easier to our research.
  2. But to make it work properly in public, we need to make it attractive to others so that they will stop by, read our jottings, and scribble something of their own.
  3. We aim to achieve a system whereby those who put most in are also those who get most out.

Who Are We?

The nLab is not a community project set up for the education and improvement of Humanity. It originally grew out of the The n-Category Café and the loose-knit community surrounding that blog. It is not possible to give a precise description of who is in that community, and the community involved in the nLab has itself evolved from that starting point. Moreover, even if it were possible to describe that community we would not wish to. We are not a closed group, we are always keen for others to join us. The two simple rules are:

  1. To join, you need to be willing to interact with the group and material already present, from the n-point of view. Specifically: is there something already on the nLab that you are interested in and is there someone already working in the nLab that you would like to talk to about it?
  2. We will ask you to leave if what you are doing has little connection with what the rest of the group is doing and if it is interfering with others trying to do their work.

In Practice?

The way that this is being worked out in practice is as follows. Currently it seems that common motivations for contributing to the nLab are

To some extent this involves

  • collecting in principle “well known” definitions and facts in an encyclopaedic fashion, to the extent that these are not readily available, or not in the desired form, for instance on Wikipedia. Depending on the enthusiasm of those who decide to contribute, this could eventually develop into something like a modern version of a Bourbaki-like project. The potential for this is conceivably there, but of course this is an ambitious idea. Time will show if the nLab can live up to this goal.

But on top of this encyclopaedic function, and hopefully in parallel to that, the nLab is

  • intended as providing a laboratory for collaborative development of ideas – for research. Within the community out of which the nLab grew exists the feeling that there is considerable potential for the fruitful application and development of categorical and higher categorical concepts and tools to various areas in mathematics, physics and philosophy. Several contributors to the nLab are actively involved in research along these lines. The nLab is meant as a place to collect, develop and present such research.

These points together imply that

  • on the nLab we do not hesitate to provide non-traditional perspectives, definitions and explanations of terms and phenomena if we feel that these are the right perspectives, definitions and explanations from a modern unified higher categorical perspective;

  • at the same time we want to indicate clearly which part of an entry is traditional common material, which is a modern but widely-accepted reformulation and which is genuinely the result of original research by a contributor or by several contributors;

  • we will intersperse possibly controversial but always constructive discussion into entries if we feel the need. While in general the n-Category Café is where we have chat and discussion and the nLab is where we compile material, few entries on the nLab are or can be meant as representing a final truth. The nLab will be the better the more we discuss its contents. For more on how to inject discussion into entries see the HowTo page.

What the nLab is not

Most importantly the nLab is

  • not complete and not meant to be complete. Neither its general structure nor each single entry are meant to be optimal in their current state. Many existing entries, possibly all of them, deserve to be and are meant to be eventually improved and expanded on. Many entries are stubs!

If you find yourself annoyed by the state any given entry is in, for whatever reason, please feel encouraged to edit it in order to improve the situation.

Notice: an entry being in a pitiful state is usually more a sign of nobody having spared the time and energy to work on it, than of our joint incompetence to write a decent entry if we were being paid for doing it. So if you find your eyebrows raised by some entry, don’t turn away to be the next one not to work on it. Instead, improve it. We all do this voluntarily. We all have other duties to look after. So don’t be annoyed with “us”, help us.

So if you feel existing material needs to be changed, you can do so. If you feel further material needs to be added, different perspectives need to be amplified, you can add new paragraph, headed by a suitable headline. Be bold: The nLab will be the better the more people decide to contribute to it.

See the HowTo page for information on how to contribute to the nLab and edit and/or create its entries.

Organization of the nLab

category: meta