> I have given a lot of reasons why I think GA is problematic: the Geometric Product is a bad operation for most purposes. It really implements operator composition and is not a very fundamental or intuitive thing. Using a Clifford Algebra to implement geometry is an implementation detail, appropriate for some problems but not for general understandings of vector algebra and all of geometry. Giving it first-class status and then bizarrely acting like that is not weird is weird and alienating to people who can see through this trick.
If I understand him correctly, he means Clifford algebra is "appropriate for some problems" but we should "move away" from "giving it first-class status" as it is not more fundamental and often does not help students understand geometry better. I also readily admitted that it has some use cases in game physics in my comment.
You're making the word "some" do a lot of work in this comment. It's true that eg I would represent the inertia tensor with a matrix. But I would calculate it with GA... and I struggle to think of many other physics problems for which I wouldn't use GA (Poisson bracket in GA is particularly elegant). See my other comment on projections I suppose.
On the other hand, from what you've posted you're clearly experienced with computer graphics - it sounds like you have at some point interpolated with dual quaternions?
This hackernews thread may not be sustainable, so perhaps join the bivector discord? https://discord.gg/bBvkuTrM I would be very interested to find out the precise things you care about, on the off chance that there is some not-yet-known-to-you way that GA can help you.
> I have given a lot of reasons why I think GA is problematic: the Geometric Product is a bad operation for most purposes. It really implements operator composition and is not a very fundamental or intuitive thing. Using a Clifford Algebra to implement geometry is an implementation detail, appropriate for some problems but not for general understandings of vector algebra and all of geometry. Giving it first-class status and then bizarrely acting like that is not weird is weird and alienating to people who can see through this trick.
If I understand him correctly, he means Clifford algebra is "appropriate for some problems" but we should "move away" from "giving it first-class status" as it is not more fundamental and often does not help students understand geometry better. I also readily admitted that it has some use cases in game physics in my comment.