mathwonk said:
sadly, the terms "covariant" and "contravariant" are extremely unfortunate, as history has crowned with the term "covariant" those objects which behave in a [categorically] contravariant fashion, and vice versa.
Well, an algebraist once, after I mentioned categories, said to me something like "Category theory should be functored out of existence."
I prefer to use vector for an element of a tangent space and covector for an element of a cotangent space, dropping the "variant" altogether.
mathwonk said:
my point here is that there is no difference of opinion whatsoever in the entire world of mathematics
Mathematicans don't always agree on terminology. For example, the text (Munkres) for the point-set topology course that I took defines a neighbourhood of x as an open set that contains x, while many other books define a neighbourhood of x as any set that contains an open set that contains x. I as I recall, these differing definitions make proofs and other definitions look a little different.
I promote strongly the "mathematician's" definition of one-form. However, there are a couple possible reason for the different meaning of one-forms - one in mathematics and one in physics.
One yellow-and-white book which I have says that a natural extension of the concept of a bilinear form on a vector space is a multilinear form. The book hints that this terminology is consistent with calling an element of the dual space a one-form. In any case, I think that you might like this book - Tensor Geometry by Dodson and Poston. From its preface:'The title of this book is mileading. Any possible title would mislead somebody. "Tensor Analysis" suggests an ungeometric, manipulative, debauch of indices, with tensors ill-defined as "quantitities that transform acording to" unspeakable fromulae. "Differential Geometry" would leave many a physicist unaware that the book is about matters withwich he is very much concerned.'
Physicists sometimes conflate f, where f: X -> Y, with f(x), an element of Y. An extension of this is that physicsts often conflate a cross section on a cotangent bundle with an element of a cotangent space. Usually, context sorts things out.
Try not to shudder too violently.
Regards,
George