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| | Category theory (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21) |
 | | If C and D are categories, one can form the product category C × D: the objects are pairs consisting of one object from C and one from D, and the morphisms are also pairs, consisting of one morphism in C and one in D. |
 | | Using the language of category theory, many areas of mathematical study can be cast into appropriate categories, such as the categories of all sets, groups, topologies, and so on. |
 | | These categories surely have some objects that are "special" in a certain way, such as the empty set or the product of two topologies. |
| www.sciencedaily.com /encyclopedia/category_theory (3251 words) |
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