From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 X-Msuck: nntp://news.gmane.io/gmane.science.mathematics.categories/4857 Path: news.gmane.org!not-for-mail From: Steve Lack Newsgroups: gmane.science.mathematics.categories Subject: Re: Enrichment over a monoidal bicategory Date: Thu, 21 May 2009 13:52:41 +1000 Message-ID: Reply-To: Steve Lack NNTP-Posting-Host: lo.gmane.org Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Trace: ger.gmane.org 1242925724 15818 80.91.229.12 (21 May 2009 17:08:44 GMT) X-Complaints-To: usenet@ger.gmane.org NNTP-Posting-Date: Thu, 21 May 2009 17:08:44 +0000 (UTC) To: Alex Hoffnung , categories Original-X-From: categories@mta.ca Thu May 21 19:08:37 2009 Return-path: Envelope-to: gsmc-categories@m.gmane.org Original-Received: from mailserv.mta.ca ([138.73.1.1]) by lo.gmane.org with esmtp (Exim 4.50) id 1M7Bkz-0003Ee-B0 for gsmc-categories@m.gmane.org; Thu, 21 May 2009 19:08:37 +0200 Original-Received: from Majordom by mailserv.mta.ca with local (Exim 4.61) (envelope-from ) id 1M7Ayw-0004Jw-Vh for categories-list@mta.ca; Thu, 21 May 2009 13:18:59 -0300 Original-Sender: categories@mta.ca Precedence: bulk Xref: news.gmane.org gmane.science.mathematics.categories:4857 Archived-At: Dear Alex, As you say, it is not hard to define bicategories enriched in a monoidal bicategory; in fact the only hard thing is saying what a monoidal bicategory is. As you also point out, these are quite different to categories enriched in a bicategory, in the sense of Walters. The latter are still "strict" structures; indeed they are categorical rather than 2-categorical, so there is no room for any non-strictness. Benabou [Introduction to bicategories, SLN 47] defined a polyad in a bicategory B to be a set X equipped with a morphism of bicategories X_ch-->B, where X_ch is the bicategory with object-set X and with all hom-categories terminal. This is exactly what Walters later called a B-enriched category, and used in his study of sheaves. (Benabou gave categories enriched in a monoidal category as an example of polyads, but did not explicitly suggest that polyads were a sort of enriched category.) Gordon, Power, and Street [Coherence for tricategories, AMS Memoirs] considered the next dimension up. For a tricategory T, they called a morphism of tricategories X_ch-->T a T-category, although did not go on to use this notion in any way. The case where T has one object is exactly the situation you discuss. There is a certain amount of flabbiness in this notion of T-categories, coming, for example, from the use of not necessarily normal homomorphisms. A tighter, more explicit definition of bicategories enriched in monoidal bicategories was given by Sean Carmody in his 1995 Cambridge thesis. They also appeared in my thesis the following year. More recently, there has been quite a lot of work done on the one-object case: pseudomonoids in Gray-monoids, or equivalently pseudomonads in Gray-categories. Hope this helps. Steve Lack. On 20/05/09 1:10 PM, "Alex Hoffnung" wrote: > Hi > > I have found that there is a fairly straightforward way to generalize > the notion of enrichment over a monoidal category to enrichment over a > monoidal bicategory. Namely, a "bicategory enriched over a monoidal > bicategory V" consists of the following: > > 1) a collection of "objects" A, B, C,... > > 2) for any pair of objects A,B, an object in V called hom(A,B) > > 3) for any triple of objects A,B,C a morphism in V called composition: > hom(A,B) tensor hom(B,C) -> hom(A,C) > where "tensor" is the tensor product in V. > > 4) for any object A a morphism in V called identity: I_A -> hom(A,A) > > 5) for any quadruple of objects A,B,C,D a 2-isomorphism in V called > the associator, which does the obvious thing. > > plus left and right unitors, and so on with all the axioms closely > following those of the definition of a bicategory. > > I am looking to be pointed in the right direction in the literature. > Can anyone help? I am aware of the fc-multicategories by Leinster and > earlier work by Walters, but those do not seem to use the monoidal > structure to enrich as I want. > > Best, > Alex Hoffnung > >