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In his famous talk from a few months ago he dismisses it as not-real-mathematics. I found it hard to tell whether he was being unironically provocative, trollish, or just cheeky.


I was being intentionally provocative. On the other hand I feel like there are plenty of people in my (mathematics) department who would say that "normal" fields like geometry, topology, algebra, number theory and analysis are where the action is happening, and category theory is just a tool which we use to get "normal" maths done. On the other hand now Scholze is beginning to use infinity categories more in his work, this might change -- but it might not. Maybe in 10 years time there will be a book "infinity categories for the working mathematician" which we all read the first ten pages of and this is all that most of us need. Note that category theorists like Hyland and Johnstone have retired from Cambridge now and have not been replaced -- in the UK now you are more likely to find a category theorist working in a computer science department than a mathematics department. Whether or not it is "real mathematics", it is certainly a fact that in the UK at least it is an extremely small community, whereas our departments are full of number theorists, geometers, topologists, analysts and algebraists all of whom need to know essentially no category theory beyond the basic language of adjoint and representable functors.




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