There is this carefully written text at the back of the book.
Perhaps it can be of use in writing the text in wikipedia:
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Homotopy type theory is a new branch of mathematics that combines
aspects of several
different fields in a surprising way. It is based on a recently
discovered connection be-
tween homotopy theory and type theory. It touches on topics as
seemingly distant as the
homotopy groups of spheres, the algorithms for type checking, and the
definition of
weak ∞-groupoids.
Homotopy type theory brings new ideas into the very foundation of
mathematics. On
the one hand, there is Voevodsky’s subtle and beautiful univalence
axiom. The univalence
axiom implies, in particular, that isomorphic structures can be
identified, a principle that
mathematicians have been happily using on workdays, despite its
incompatibility with
the “official” doctrines of conventional foundations. On the other
hand, we have higher
inductive types, which provide direct, logical descriptions of some of
the basic spaces
and constructions of homotopy theory: spheres, cylinders, truncations,
localizations,
etc. Both ideas are impossible to capture directly in classical
set-theoretic foundations,
but when combined in homotopy type theory, they permit an entirely new
kind of “logic
of homotopy types”.
This suggests a new conception of foundations of mathematics, with
intrinsic homotopi-
cal content, an “invariant” conception of the objects of mathematics —
and convenient
machine implementations, which can serve as a practical aid to the
working mathemati-
cian. This is the Univalent Foundations program.
The present book is intended as a first systematic exposition of the
basics of univalent
foundations, and a collection of examples of this new style of
reasoning — but without
requiring the reader to know or learn any formal logic, or to use any
computer proof
assistant. We believe that univalent foundations will eventually
become a viable alter-
native to set theory as the “implicit foundation” for the unformalized
mathematics done
by most mathematicians.
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