Oh, you are the author of the Insights

, now I'm reading
this one, and I see that in your reply your are mentioning a passage about which I have a question.
So it is written:
This formula can be visualized by the commutativity of the following diagram:
\begin{equation*} \begin{aligned} G &\stackrel{\operatorname{Ad}}{\longrightarrow} GL(\mathfrak{g}) \\ \exp \uparrow & \quad \quad \uparrow \exp \\ \mathfrak{g} &\stackrel{\operatorname{ad}}{\longrightarrow} \mathfrak{gl(g)} \end{aligned} \end{equation*}
between Lie groups (analytic manifolds in which group multiplication and inversion are analytical functions) in the top row and their tangent spaces at g=1 (Lie algebras) in the bottom row. It reflects an integration process, similar to the standard ansatz when solving differential equations by assuming an exponential function as solution. In this sense the adjoint representation of the Lie algebra is the differential of the adjoint representation of the Lie group, and the adjoint representation of the Lie group the integrated adjoint representation of the Lie algebra. It integrates 0∈g to 1∈G1, resp. the tangent space at g=1 to the connection component of the group identity. The differentiation process can be achieved by considering flows on the manifolds (cp. [6] or [12],[13]).
To be honest my question is only related to the left part of the diagram
\begin{equation*} \begin{aligned} G \\ \exp \uparrow \\ \mathfrak{g} \end{aligned} \end{equation*}
and my reasoning stems from following a
video on youtube (I like it very much, so I believe that sharing is helpful...) where the author there is deriving (around minute 5) the exponential
from a basic relation that describes "how the generators generate the infinitesimal Lie group elements, that are infinitesimally close to the identity"
to an exponential relation that is supposed to relate "finite elements in a finite distance away, where we can no longer assume that we're dealing with infinitesimal distances".
So, my comment that I'm trying to write down in a confused way (I know that some math professionals can not stand me and so they can simply ignore my posts

) is that, for that exponential limit to hold at
finite distance from the identity I guess we need to assume that:
a differential manifold with a Lie group structure is such that for any point (so,
not only in the neighborhood of the identity) of the (finite, not infinitesimal) transformation the tangent space is by definition the Lie algebra... correct?

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