Comment by F0sh on 26/06/2024 at 23:08 UTC

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View submission: Ask Anything Wednesday - Engineering, Mathematics, Computer Science

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Linear transformations are introduced as a certain kind of function of vectors of real numbers, and they are generally defined as a certain kind of functions of vectors of any *field*.

Category theory studies many areas of mathematics by looking at objects (for example vector spaces over a certain field) and the transformations of objects in those spaces (for example, linear transformations).

In mathematics you often look at objects and study them by examining their subobjects. For example, there are many sub-vector-spaces of the space of 3-dimensional real vectors. Category theory allows you to generalise this idea to that of a subcategory relation, allowing you to prove theorems in a very general way and then apply them not just to vector spaces, but also to all modules, and maybe also to groups, rings, topological spaces and so on.

Category theory isn't concerned with the precise properties of linear transformations; you would never compute the actual numerical values of a transformation applied to a vector when doing category theory, pretty much.

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