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15 - What Can (Mathematical) Categories Tell Us about Spacetime?

from Part III - Issues of Interpretation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 April 2020

Nick Huggett
Affiliation:
University of Illinois, Chicago
Keizo Matsubara
Affiliation:
Uppsala Universitet, Sweden
Christian Wüthrich
Affiliation:
Université de Genève
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Summary

It is widely believed that in quantum theories of gravity, the classical description of spacetime as a manifold is no longer viable as a fundamental concept. Instead, spacetime emerges as an approximation in appropriate regimes. In order to understand what is required to explain this emergence, it is necessary to have a good understanding of the classical structure of spacetime. I focus on the concept of spacetime as it appears in locally covariant quantum field theory (LCQFT), an axiomatic framework for describing quantum field theories in the presence of gravitational background fields. A key aspect of LCQFT is the way in which it formulates locality and general covariance, using the language of category theory. I argue that the use of category theory gives a precise and explicit statement of how spacetime acts as an organizing principle in a certain systems view of the world. Along the way I indicate how physical theories give rise to categories that act as a kind of model for modal logic, and how the categorical view of spacetime shifts the emphasis away from the manifold structure. The latter point suggests that the view of spacetime as an organizing principle may persist, perhaps in a generalized way, even in a quantum theory of gravity. I mention some new questions, which this shift in emphasis raises.

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Beyond Spacetime
The Foundations of Quantum Gravity
, pp. 338 - 357
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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