Isotropy
Tuesday, January 03, 2006
In Chapter 2 of "Model Theory", Wilfred Hodges lists three ways that mathematicians use formulas:
"First, a mathematician writes the equation 'y=4x*x'. By writing this equation one names a set of points in the plane.... As a model theorist would put it, the equation defines a 2-ary relation on the reals....
Or second, a mathematician writes down the laws
- ∀ x, y, z, x ≤ y and y ≤ z imply x ≤ z;
- ∀ x,y exactly one of x ≤ y, y ≤ x, x=y holds.
Third, a mathematician defines a homomorphism from a group G to a group H to be a map from G to H such that x=y*z implies f(x) = f(y)*f(z). Here the equation x=y*z defines a class of maps."
From this starting point, how should a model theorist regard the skein relations of knot theory?
These specify a small area of a knot where differences are allowed - outside the displayed area, the three knots must be identical.
