Monsky's Theorem

by hyperbraineron 4/19/25, 9:12 PMwith 13 comments
by ogogmadon 4/19/25, 10:45 PM

Haven't read the article. But something about this reminds me of Arnold's topological proof of the unsolvability of the quintic (YouTube form: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BSHv9Elk1MU ; PDF: https://web.williams.edu/Mathematics/lg5/394/ArnoldQuintic.p...).

It seems a lot of impossibility theorems - the type that the ancient Greeks would have understood - can be proven using algebraic topology. Perhaps Sperner's lemma can be seen as an algebraic topology theorem? I don't personally know.

by akoboldfryingon 4/20/25, 1:44 AM

> To show that detM is non-zero, we can show that its 2-adic valuation is nonzero.

I think the last word in that sentence should be "finite"?

Also do I understand correctly that "face" means "maximal line segment"? (I see some other comments discussing this and concluding that "face" means "edge", but to me, an "edge" doesn't permit "intermediate" vertices.)

by prof-dr-iron 4/19/25, 10:40 PM

> no face of P, nor any face of one of the Ti, contains vertices of all three colors

That should be 'edge', not 'face', no? Otherwise I do not understand what is happening at all with the examples.

by bobmcnamaraon 4/20/25, 12:00 AM

Taaaake it to the limit: N=∞, area=0, job done