On 7/3/23 15:56, Marshall Stoner wrote:
> have written up everything I considered prior to the definition of the
> biconditional and conjugation.
> . . . will attach and share what I have written so far as soon as I
> know that I am approved for the mailing list. . . .
I'll be curious to see what you came up with and how you organize it. We
have some ways of organizing material on the website, for example "How
to intuitionize classical proofs" at
https://us.metamath.org/ileuni/mmil.html#intuitionize , "Real and
Complex Numbers" at
https://us.metamath.org/mpeuni/mmcomplex.html , or
"Algebraic and Topological Structures" at
https://us.metamath.org/mpeuni/mmtopstr.html . All of these link to
relevant theorems but add explanations or give some structure in terms
of how one statement relates to another.
Making pull requests to the web site should now be possible but feel
free to ask if it isn't clear where files go, whether website scripts
need to be changed, etc.
Semi-relatedly, someone recently asked on Mastodon what a good source
for the constructive ordinals is. There have been three suggestions so
far. One is a normal math book (the HoTT book). The other two are
collections of formalized proofs (
iset.mm and TypeToplogy). And neither
of the latter two give you an especially good idea of where to find the
ordinal stuff and where to start. It got me thinking about how to make
the material we have easy to read especially in cases where noone has
written a textbook which lays everything out carefully with the purpose
of teaching. Anyway, the thread is
https://mathstodon.xyz/@boarders/110646213816213644 in case anyone is
interested.