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* Isbell & MacLane on the insufficiency on skeletal categories
@ 2013-05-24 22:34 Staffan Angere
  2013-05-25 15:47 ` Colin McLarty
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Staffan Angere @ 2013-05-24 22:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: categories

Dear Category theorists,

in Categories for the Working Mathematician, page 164, MacLane relates an argument, "due to Isbell", why one cannot identify all isomorphic objects. I  have not, however, been able to find any publication of Isbell that contains the argument. Does anyone here know if he published it?

I also have a question about the argument itself: why is it made the way MacLane does it, rather than just though noticing that all functions from countable sets are countable, and thus themselves countable, and so isomorphic  to any other countable set? It seems like it would follow directly from this that any functions on the natural numbers have to be equal, if isomorphic (i.e. equinumerious) sets are identical. Why is MacLane doing all the "detours" though products, epics, etc.?

Thanks in advance,
Staffan

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread

* Re: Isbell & MacLane on the insufficiency on skeletal categories
  2013-05-24 22:34 Isbell & MacLane on the insufficiency on skeletal categories Staffan Angere
@ 2013-05-25 15:47 ` Colin McLarty
  2013-05-26 20:26   ` Bas Spitters
  2013-06-06 22:00   ` Vaughan Pratt
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Colin McLarty @ 2013-05-25 15:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: categories

There is no problem, either in practice or in formal ETCS or CCAF
foundations, with assuming there is only one countably infinite set, call
it N.  Then indeed every function N-->N has graph N>-->NxN for some monic
N>-->NxN.  But there are uncountably many different monics N>-->NxN so it
does not follow that all functions N-->N are equal.  Different monics to
NxN can have identical domains.

Of course is also follows that NxN=N.  But it does not follow, and in fact
it is refutable, that the projection functions are the identity function
1_N.

Isbell's argument is on p. 164 of my copy of CfWM (1998).  On the plainest
reading, it shows you could assume Xx(YxZ)=(XxY)xZ as sets, for all sets
nX,Y,Z, but even then it is contradictory to suppose the associativity
function  Xx(YxZ) --> (XxY)xZ is always the identity function.

This shows we cannot simultaneously maintain:

1)  There is a category Set^2 with the usual properties of a functor
category.
2)  Isomorphic objects are equal in all categories.

Mac~Lane concludes we cannot accept the sweeping skeletal principle 2.

I will say some higher category theorists promote another option.  They
would keep 2, by rejecting 1, by saying there are not functor categories in
the standard (1-categorical) sense, but only some infinity-categorical
analogue.  I do not know if that has ever been systematically spelled out
though of course there are projects like Makkai's advocacy of FOLDS that
are meant to go that way.

Colin


On Fri, May 24, 2013 at 6:34 PM, Staffan Angere <staffan.angere@fil.lu.se>wrote:

> Dear Category theorists,
>
> in Categories for the Working Mathematician, page 164, MacLane relates an
> argument, "due to Isbell", why one cannot identify all isomorphic objects.
> I  have not, however, been able to find any publication of Isbell that
> contains the argument. Does anyone here know if he published it?
>
> I also have a question about the argument itself: why is it made the way
> MacLane does it, rather than just though noticing that all functions from
> countable sets are countable, and thus themselves countable, and so
> isomorphic  to any other countable set? It seems like it would follow
> directly from this that any functions on the natural numbers have to be
> equal, if isomorphic (i.e. equinumerious) sets are identical. Why is
> MacLane doing all the "detours" though products, epics, etc.?
>
> Thanks in advance,
> Staffan
>

[For admin and other information see: http://www.mta.ca/~cat-dist/ ]


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread

* Re: Isbell & MacLane on the insufficiency on skeletal categories
  2013-05-25 15:47 ` Colin McLarty
@ 2013-05-26 20:26   ` Bas Spitters
  2013-06-06 22:00   ` Vaughan Pratt
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Bas Spitters @ 2013-05-26 20:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Colin McLarty; +Cc: categories

On Sat, May 25, 2013 at 5:47 PM, Colin McLarty <colin.mclarty@case.edu> wrote:
> This shows we cannot simultaneously maintain:
>
> 1)  There is a category Set^2 with the usual properties of a functor
> category.
> 2)  Isomorphic objects are equal in all categories.
>
> I will say some higher category theorists promote another option.  They
> would keep 2, by rejecting 1, by saying there are not functor categories in
> the standard (1-categorical) sense, but only some infinity-categorical
> analogue.  I do not know if that has ever been systematically spelled out
> though of course there are projects like Makkai's advocacy of FOLDS that
> are meant to go that way.

Such an approach has recently been developed here:

http://arxiv.org/abs/1303.0584
Univalent categories and the Rezk completion
Benedikt Ahrens, Chris Kapulkin, Michael Shulman
---
     We develop category theory within Univalent Foundations, which is
a foundational system for mathematics based on a homotopical
interpretation of dependent type theory. In this system, we propose a
definition of "category" for which equality and equivalence of
categories agree. Such categories satisfy a version of the Univalence
Axiom, saying that the type of isomorphisms between any two objects is
equivalent to the identity type between these objects; we call them
"saturated" or "univalent" categories. Moreover, we show that any
category is weakly equivalent to a univalent one in a universal way.
In homotopical and higher-categorical semantics, this construction
corresponds to a truncated version of the Rezk completion for Segal
spaces, and also to the stack completion of a prestack.
---


Bas


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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread

* Re: Isbell & MacLane on the insufficiency on skeletal categories
  2013-05-25 15:47 ` Colin McLarty
  2013-05-26 20:26   ` Bas Spitters
@ 2013-06-06 22:00   ` Vaughan Pratt
  2013-06-07  5:00     ` Colin McLarty
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Vaughan Pratt @ 2013-06-06 22:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  Cc: categories

On 5/25/2013 8:47 AM, Colin McLarty wrote:
> Of course is also follows that NxN=N.  But it does not follow, and in fact
> it is refutable, that the projection functions are the identity function
> 1_N. Isbell's argument is on p. 164 of my copy of CfWM (1998).

Why do you need Isbell's long argument, or even any monoidal structure
on Set, to obtain a contradiction here?  Just use that NxN is a product
and observe that the pair (3,4) in NxN (as a map from 1 to NxN) would
have to be both 3 and 4 (as maps from 1 to N) when the projections are
the identity.

The inconsistency found by Isbell works even when the projections seem
quite reasonable, namely when taken to be the three projections from the
ternary product XxYxZ whose elements are triples (x,y,z) (as the
necessary meaning of identity of associativity a: Xx(YxZ) --> (XxY)xZ).
   One can in fact consistently equip Skel(FinSet) with such structure.
Isbell shows that extending this to infinite sets breaks down, namely by
creating additional equations not encountered with finite sets due to
interference between binary and ternary product resulting from the
identification of N with NxN.

One can get close to a skeleton of Set using tau-categories as per
section 1.493 of Cats & Alligators; N becomes the ordinal omega, whose
square is a distinct object albeit still isomorphic to omega.  The full
subcategory of finite ordinals is (isomorphic to) Skel(FinSet).

Vaughan Pratt


[For admin and other information see: http://www.mta.ca/~cat-dist/ ]


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread

* Re: Isbell & MacLane on the insufficiency on skeletal categories
  2013-06-06 22:00   ` Vaughan Pratt
@ 2013-06-07  5:00     ` Colin McLarty
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Colin McLarty @ 2013-06-07  5:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Vaughan Pratt; +Cc: categories

Vaughan,

Your quote runs two of my paragraphs together.  .Certainly the point about
N does not need Isbell's argument.

Colin


On Thu, Jun 6, 2013 at 6:00 PM, Vaughan Pratt <pratt@cs.stanford.edu> wrote:

> On 5/25/2013 8:47 AM, Colin McLarty wrote:
>
>> Of course is also follows that NxN=N.  But it does not follow, and in fact
>> it is refutable, that the projection functions are the identity function
>> 1_N. Isbell's argument is on p. 164 of my copy of CfWM (1998).
>>
>
> Why do you need Isbell's long argument, or even any monoidal structure
> on Set, to obtain a contradiction here?  Just use that NxN is a product
> and observe that the pair (3,4) in NxN (as a map from 1 to NxN) would
> have to be both 3 and 4 (as maps from 1 to N) when the projections are
> the identity.
>
> The inconsistency found by Isbell works even when the projections seem
> quite reasonable, namely when taken to be the three projections from the
> ternary product XxYxZ whose elements are triples (x,y,z) (as the
> necessary meaning of identity of associativity a: Xx(YxZ) --> (XxY)xZ).
>   One can in fact consistently equip Skel(FinSet) with such structure.
> Isbell shows that extending this to infinite sets breaks down, namely by
> creating additional equations not encountered with finite sets due to
> interference between binary and ternary product resulting from the
> identification of N with NxN.
>
> One can get close to a skeleton of Set using tau-categories as per
> section 1.493 of Cats & Alligators; N becomes the ordinal omega, whose
> square is a distinct object albeit still isomorphic to omega.  The full
> subcategory of finite ordinals is (isomorphic to) Skel(FinSet).
>
> Vaughan Pratt

[For admin and other information see: http://www.mta.ca/~cat-dist/ ]


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread

* Re: Isbell & MacLane on the insufficiency on skeletal categories
@ 2013-06-07  3:15 Fred E.J. Linton
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Fred E.J. Linton @ 2013-06-07  3:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Vaughan Pratt; +Cc: categories

On Thu, 06 Jun 2013 07:45:03 PM EDT, by Vaughan Pratt
<pratt@cs.stanford.edu>:

> On 5/25/2013 8:47 AM, Colin McLarty wrote:
>> Of course is also follows that NxN=N.  But it does not follow, and in
fact
>> it is refutable, that the projection functions are the identity function
>> 1_N. Isbell's argument is on p. 164 of my copy of CfWM (1998).
> 
> Why do you need Isbell's long argument, or even any monoidal structure
> on Set, to obtain a contradiction here?  Just use that NxN is a product
> and observe that the pair (3,4) in NxN (as a map from 1 to NxN) would
> have to be both 3 and 4 (as maps from 1 to N) when the projections are
> the identity.

Even more convincing: The equalizer of those two projections from N x N
must be the diagonal in N x N. But if those projections are equal, their
equalizer is all of N x N. Thus every map to N x N factors through the
diagonal there, i.e., no matter what the object A, for every pair of maps
f, g: A --> N, we must have f = g. It will follow that N is terminal.

[Or was that your argument, Vaughan, that I somehow did not recognize?] 

Cheers, -- Fred




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-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2013-05-24 22:34 Isbell & MacLane on the insufficiency on skeletal categories Staffan Angere
2013-05-25 15:47 ` Colin McLarty
2013-05-26 20:26   ` Bas Spitters
2013-06-06 22:00   ` Vaughan Pratt
2013-06-07  5:00     ` Colin McLarty
2013-06-07  3:15 Fred E.J. Linton

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