Tangent infinity-categories and Goodwillie calculus
Kristine Bauer, Matthew Burke, Michael Ching

TL;DR
This paper develops a higher-categorical framework linking Goodwillie calculus and differential calculus of manifolds, introducing tangent infinity-categories to unify these theories and analyze their structures.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of tangent infinity-categories, extending tangent categories to a higher-categorical setting, and applies this to formalize the analogy between Goodwillie calculus and differential geometry.
Findings
Lurie's tangent bundle admits additional structure maps.
Goodwillie n-excisive functors correspond to n-jets of smooth maps.
Stable infinity-categories play the role of Euclidean spaces in Goodwillie calculus.
Abstract
We make precise the analogy between Goodwillie's calculus of functors in homotopy theory and the differential calculus of smooth manifolds by introducing a higher-categorical framework of which both theories are examples. That framework is an extension to infinity-categories of the tangent categories of Cockett and Cruttwell (introduced originally by Rosick\'y). The basic data of a tangent infinity-category consist of an endofunctor, that plays the role of the tangent bundle construction, together with various natural transformations that mimic structure possessed by the ordinary tangent bundles of smooth manifolds. The role of the tangent bundle functor in Goodwillie calculus is played by Lurie's tangent bundle for infinity-categories, introduced to generalize the cotangent complexes of Andr\'e, Quillen and Illusie. We show that Lurie's construction admits the additional structure…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsHomotopy and Cohomology in Algebraic Topology · Algebraic structures and combinatorial models · Advanced Topics in Algebra
