nLab
The nLab is a wiki for research-level notes, expositions and collaborative work, including original research, in mathematics, physics, and philosophy, with a focus on methods from category theory and homotopy theory. The nLab espouses the "n-point of view"[1] (a deliberate pun on Wikipedia's "neutral point of view") that category theory and particularly higher n-category theory provide a useful unifying viewpoint for mathematics, physics and philosophy.
The nLab was originally conceived to provide a repository for ideas (and even new research) generated in the comments on posts at the n-Category Café, a group blog run (at the time) by John Baez, David Corfield and Urs Schreiber. Eventually the nLab developed into an independent project which has since grown to include whole research projects and encyclopedic material.[2]
Associated to the nLab is the nForum, an online discussion forum for announcement and discussion of nLab edits (the analog of Wikipedia's "talk" pages) as well as for general discussion of the topics covered in the nLab. The preferred way of contacting the nLab steering committee is to post on the nForum.[3] An experimental sub-project of the nLab is the Publications of the nLab, intended as a journal for refereed research articles that are published online and cross-hyperlinked with the main wiki.
The nLab was set up on November 28, 2008 by Urs Schreiber using the Instiki software provided and maintained by Jacques Distler. Since May 2015 it runs on a server at Carnegie Mellon University that is funded in the context of Steve Awodey's HoTT MURI grant. The system administrator is Adeel Khan Yusufzai. The domain ncatlab.org is owned by Urs Schreiber.
The nLab is listed on MathOverflow as a standard online mathematics reference to check before asking questions.[4] Many questions and answers link to the nLab for background material.[5] It is one of two wikis mentioned by the mathematical physicist John C. Baez in his review of math blogs for the American Mathematical Society.[6]
There is an informal steering committee, which "doesn't run the nLab",[7] but exists in order to resolve issues that would cause the whole project to run into trouble.
References
- ↑ nPOV in nLab
- ↑ Urs Schreiber, What is... the nLab?
- ↑ in nLab meta
- ↑ MathOverflow, 1.0 'How to ask' page. Archived on 2013-06-04.
- ↑ MathOverflow, Results for a search for 'nlab'. As of 2014-02-28 there are over 500 results.
- ↑ John C. Baez, "Math Blogs", Notices of the American Mathematical Society, March 2010
- ↑ Steering committee in nLab meta