该值不存在!极值分析的动机

IF 16.4 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Accounts of Chemical Research Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.3934/puqr.2022013
J. Aubin, H. Frankowska
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引用次数: 1

摘要

Standard mathematical economics studies the production, exchange, and consumption of goods “provided with units of measurement,” as in physics, in order to be enumerated, quantified, added, etc. Therefore, “baskets of goods,” which should describe subsets of goods, are mathematically represented as commodity vectors of a vector space, linear combination of units of goods, evaluated by prices, which are linear numerical functions. Therefore, in this sense, mathematical economics is a branch of physics.However, economics, and many other domains of life sciences, investigate also what will be called entities, defining elements deprived of units of measure, which thus cannot be enumerated.(1) Denoting by \begin{document}$X$\end{document} the set of entities \begin{document}$x \in X$\end{document} deprived of units of measurement, a “basket of goods” is actually a subset \begin{document}$K \subset X$\end{document} of the set entities, i.e., an element of the “hyperset” \begin{document}${\cal{P}}(X)$\end{document}, the family of subsets of \begin{document}$X$\end{document}, and no longer a commodity vector of the vector space of commodities;(2) Entities can be “gathered” instead of being “added”;(3) Entities can still be evaluated by a family of functions \begin{document}$A: x \in X \mapsto A(x) \in \mathbb{R}$\end{document} regarded as a “valuators,” in lieu and place of linear “prices” evaluating the units of economic goods.(4) Subsets of entities can be evaluated by an “interval of values” between two extremal ones, the minimum and the maximum, instead of the sum of values of units of goods weighted by their quantities.Life sciences dealing with intertwined relations among many combinations of entities, hypersets offer metaphors of “Lamarckian complexity” that keeps us away from binary relations, graphs of functions, and set-valued maps, to focus our attention on “multinary relations” between families of hypersets. Even deprived of units of measurement, these “proletarian” entities still enjoy enough properties for this pauperization to be mathematically consistent.This is the object of this extremal manifesto: in economics and other domains of life sciences, vector spaces should yield their imperial status of “state space” to hypersets and linear prices to hypervaluators.We no longer have to add goods which can only be gathered, prices do not have to be linear, although it costs some effort to deprive oneself of the powerful and luxurious charms of convex and linear functional analysis motivated by physics.These sacrifices concern only economics and other fields of life science, since physicists deal with experimental observations of objects endowed with unit of measurement by adequate processes of measurement. They can happily live in vector spaces without any guilt. This is not the case of life scientists, who have mainly history to support and validate their observations, with, sometimes, the privilege to statistically measure the frequency of some of them.
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The value does not exist! A motivation for extremal analysis

Standard mathematical economics studies the production, exchange, and consumption of goods “provided with units of measurement,” as in physics, in order to be enumerated, quantified, added, etc. Therefore, “baskets of goods,” which should describe subsets of goods, are mathematically represented as commodity vectors of a vector space, linear combination of units of goods, evaluated by prices, which are linear numerical functions. Therefore, in this sense, mathematical economics is a branch of physics.

However, economics, and many other domains of life sciences, investigate also what will be called entities, defining elements deprived of units of measure, which thus cannot be enumerated.

(1) Denoting by \begin{document}$X$\end{document} the set of entities \begin{document}$x \in X$\end{document} deprived of units of measurement, a “basket of goods” is actually a subset \begin{document}$K \subset X$\end{document} of the set entities, i.e., an element of the “hyperset\begin{document}${\cal{P}}(X)$\end{document}, the family of subsets of \begin{document}$X$\end{document}, and no longer a commodity vector of the vector space of commodities;

(2) Entities can be “gathered” instead of being “added”;

(3) Entities can still be evaluated by a family of functions \begin{document}$A: x \in X \mapsto A(x) \in \mathbb{R}$\end{document} regarded as a “valuators,” in lieu and place of linear “prices” evaluating the units of economic goods.

(4) Subsets of entities can be evaluated by an “interval of valuesbetween two extremal ones, the minimum and the maximum, instead of the sum of values of units of goods weighted by their quantities.

Life sciences dealing with intertwined relations among many combinations of entities, hypersets offer metaphors of “Lamarckian complexity” that keeps us away from binary relations, graphs of functions, and set-valued maps, to focus our attention on “multinary relations” between families of hypersets. Even deprived of units of measurement, these “proletarian” entities still enjoy enough properties for this pauperization to be mathematically consistent.

This is the object of this extremal manifesto: in economics and other domains of life sciences, vector spaces should yield their imperial status of “state space” to hypersets and linear prices to hypervaluators.

We no longer have to add goods which can only be gathered, prices do not have to be linear, although it costs some effort to deprive oneself of the powerful and luxurious charms of convex and linear functional analysis motivated by physics.

These sacrifices concern only economics and other fields of life science, since physicists deal with experimental observations of objects endowed with unit of measurement by adequate processes of measurement. They can happily live in vector spaces without any guilt. This is not the case of life scientists, who have mainly history to support and validate their observations, with, sometimes, the privilege to statistically measure the frequency of some of them.

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来源期刊
Accounts of Chemical Research
Accounts of Chemical Research 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
31.40
自引率
1.10%
发文量
312
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Accounts of Chemical Research presents short, concise and critical articles offering easy-to-read overviews of basic research and applications in all areas of chemistry and biochemistry. These short reviews focus on research from the author’s own laboratory and are designed to teach the reader about a research project. In addition, Accounts of Chemical Research publishes commentaries that give an informed opinion on a current research problem. Special Issues online are devoted to a single topic of unusual activity and significance. Accounts of Chemical Research replaces the traditional article abstract with an article "Conspectus." These entries synopsize the research affording the reader a closer look at the content and significance of an article. Through this provision of a more detailed description of the article contents, the Conspectus enhances the article's discoverability by search engines and the exposure for the research.
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