Israeli physicist–mathematician Yehuda Ashkelon has brought to completion Les Dérivateurs, the vast but unfinished manuscript of Alexander Grothendieck, one of the most influential figures in 20th-century mathematics.
Grothendieck revolutionised algebraic geometry and left behind Les Dérivateurs — a 2,000-page manuscript that lacked the key axiom needed for coherence. For more than forty years, this omission left the project unresolved, a longstanding challenge in higher category theory.
Ashkelon has now proposed the “Fifth Axiom (D5),” which he describes as the natural final piece that completes Grothendieck’s vision. This axiom provides the structural unity missing from the original work, bringing the theory of derivators to formal completion after nearly half a century.
“Grothendieck himself sought a coherent closure for Les Dérivateurs,” Ashkelon said. “What I have added is not a new invention but the natural completion of his vision — the axiom that was waiting to be formulated.”
The paper has been released in tandem on arXiv, the world’s largest scientific archive for mathematics and physics, and Zenodo, the open-access repository managed by CERN. The dual publication reflects both the academic importance and the international relevance of the result.
The impact of the work reaches well beyond category theory. For many academics, completing Les Dérivateurs represents a rare historical milestone – the closure of a major unfinished programme in mathematics.
The new axiom has been described as a “historic step in modern mathematics,” with implications extending from homotopical algebra to broader questions in the philosophy of mathematics.
Commentators have compared the achievement to setting the final stone on a cathedral long left incomplete – a grand vision of Grothendieck, now realised in its entirety.
Ashkelon, trained in theoretical physics and cosmology, noted that the work is both a tribute and a new foundation.
“It is a ground that has at last been made solid,” he said. “Once the structure is sealed, new horizons can unfold with clarity and depth.”
While mathematicians will now examine the Fifth Axiom (D5) in detail, its symbolic weight is already evident: an unfinished 20th-century programme has found resolution in the 21st.
In doing so, Ashkelon has secured his contribution as part of mathematical history, linking Grothendieck’s vision with the work of future generations.
About the Author:
Yehuda Ashkelon is an Israeli physicist–mathematician whose research spans theoretical physics, cosmology, and the philosophical foundations of mathematics. His latest work provides the formal completion of Grothendieck’s Les Dérivateurs through the introduction of a Fifth Axiom (D5).















