strangerep
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This is an oversimplified criticism, hence unhelpful. Of course a Cartan geometry has an underlying manifold, but it has more structure. One equips the tangent bundle with an (abstract) Ehresmann connection to distinguish horizontal/vertical directions in a coordinate-independent way. Then one specializes the Ehresmann connection to be a Cartan connection with extra, more concrete, properties) to bring the framework closer to physics. The fact that a Cartan connection can be regarded in terms of Lie group deformation theory is not "absurd". (Whether this point of view is in fact useful for real world physics remains to be seen, but let us keep the criticisms on an informed and constructive level.)E8(8) said:The abstract of [Garrett's] paper: "Our universe is a deforming Lie group.", can be thus rewritten as:
"Our universe is a manifold."
Because a Cartan geometry has as underlying space a manifold.