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Autonomous Category
In mathematics, an autonomous category is a monoidal category where dual objects exist. Definition A ''left'' (resp. ''right'') ''autonomous category'' is a monoidal category where every object has a left (resp. right) dual. An ''autonomous category'' is a monoidal category where every object has both a left and a right dual. Rigid category is a synonym for autonomous category. In a symmetric monoidal category, the existence of left duals is equivalent to the existence of right duals, categories of this kind are called (symmetric) compact closed categories. In categorial grammars, categories which are both left and right rigid are often called pregroups, and are employed in Lambek calculus, a non-symmetric extension of linear logic Linear logic is a substructural logic proposed by Jean-Yves Girard as a refinement of classical and intuitionistic logic, joining the dualities of the former with many of the constructive properties of the latter. Although the logic has also ...
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Mathematics
Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics with the major subdisciplines of number theory, algebra, geometry, and analysis, respectively. There is no general consensus among mathematicians about a common definition for their academic discipline. Most mathematical activity involves the discovery of properties of abstract objects and the use of pure reason to prove them. These objects consist of either abstractions from nature orin modern mathematicsentities that are stipulated to have certain properties, called axioms. A ''proof'' consists of a succession of applications of deductive rules to already established results. These results include previously proved theorems, axioms, andin case of abstraction from naturesome basic properties that are considered true starting points of ...
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Monoidal Category
In mathematics, a monoidal category (or tensor category) is a category \mathbf C equipped with a bifunctor :\otimes : \mathbf \times \mathbf \to \mathbf that is associative up to a natural isomorphism, and an object ''I'' that is both a left and right identity for ⊗, again up to a natural isomorphism. The associated natural isomorphisms are subject to certain coherence conditions, which ensure that all the relevant diagrams commute. The ordinary tensor product makes vector spaces, abelian groups, ''R''-modules, or ''R''-algebras into monoidal categories. Monoidal categories can be seen as a generalization of these and other examples. Every (small) monoidal category may also be viewed as a "categorification" of an underlying monoid, namely the monoid whose elements are the isomorphism classes of the category's objects and whose binary operation is given by the category's tensor product. A rather different application, of which monoidal categories can be considered an abstractio ...
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Dual Object
In category theory, a branch of mathematics, a dual object is an analogue of a dual vector space from linear algebra for objects in arbitrary monoidal categories. It is only a partial generalization, based upon the categorical properties of duality for finite-dimensional vector spaces. An object admitting a dual is called a dualizable object. In this formalism, infinite-dimensional vector spaces are not dualizable, since the dual vector space ''V''∗ doesn't satisfy the axioms. Often, an object is dualizable only when it satisfies some finiteness or compactness property. A category in which each object has a dual is called autonomous or rigid. The category of finite-dimensional vector spaces with the standard tensor product is rigid, while the category of all vector spaces is not. Motivation Let ''V'' be a finite-dimensional vector space over some field ''K''. The standard notion of a dual vector space ''V''∗ has the following property: for any ''K''-vector spaces ''U'' an ...
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Symmetric Monoidal Category
In category theory, a branch of mathematics, a symmetric monoidal category is a monoidal category (i.e. a category in which a "tensor product" \otimes is defined) such that the tensor product is symmetric (i.e. A\otimes B is, in a certain strict sense, naturally isomorphic to B\otimes A for all objects A and B of the category). One of the prototypical examples of a symmetric monoidal category is the category of vector spaces over some fixed field ''k,'' using the ordinary tensor product of vector spaces. Definition A symmetric monoidal category is a monoidal category (''C'', ⊗, ''I'') such that, for every pair ''A'', ''B'' of objects in ''C'', there is an isomorphism s_: A \otimes B \to B \otimes A that is natural in both ''A'' and ''B'' and such that the following diagrams commute: *The unit coherence: *: *The associativity coherence: *: *The inverse law: *: In the diagrams above, ''a'', ''l'' , ''r'' are the associativity isomorphism, the left unit isomorphism, and the right un ...
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Closed Monoidal Category
In mathematics, especially in category theory, a closed monoidal category (or a ''monoidal closed category'') is a category that is both a monoidal category and a closed category in such a way that the structures are compatible. A classic example is the category of sets, Set, where the monoidal product of sets A and B is the usual cartesian product A \times B, and the internal Hom B^A is the set of functions from A to B. A non- cartesian example is the category of vector spaces, ''K''-Vect, over a field K. Here the monoidal product is the usual tensor product of vector spaces, and the internal Hom is the vector space of linear maps from one vector space to another. The internal language of closed symmetric monoidal categories is linear logic and the type system is the linear type system. Many examples of closed monoidal categories are symmetric. However, this need not always be the case, as non-symmetric monoidal categories can be encountered in category-theoretic formulatio ...
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Biclosed Monoidal Category
In mathematics, especially in category theory, a closed monoidal category (or a ''monoidal closed category'') is a category that is both a monoidal category and a closed category in such a way that the structures are compatible. A classic example is the category of sets, Set, where the monoidal product of sets A and B is the usual cartesian product A \times B, and the internal Hom B^A is the set of functions from A to B. A non-cartesian example is the category of vector spaces, ''K''-Vect, over a field K. Here the monoidal product is the usual tensor product of vector spaces, and the internal Hom is the vector space of linear maps from one vector space to another. The internal language of closed symmetric monoidal categories is linear logic and the type system is the linear type system. Many examples of closed monoidal categories are symmetric. However, this need not always be the case, as non-symmetric monoidal categories can be encountered in category-theoretic formulations of ...
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Dual Object
In category theory, a branch of mathematics, a dual object is an analogue of a dual vector space from linear algebra for objects in arbitrary monoidal categories. It is only a partial generalization, based upon the categorical properties of duality for finite-dimensional vector spaces. An object admitting a dual is called a dualizable object. In this formalism, infinite-dimensional vector spaces are not dualizable, since the dual vector space ''V''∗ doesn't satisfy the axioms. Often, an object is dualizable only when it satisfies some finiteness or compactness property. A category in which each object has a dual is called autonomous or rigid. The category of finite-dimensional vector spaces with the standard tensor product is rigid, while the category of all vector spaces is not. Motivation Let ''V'' be a finite-dimensional vector space over some field ''K''. The standard notion of a dual vector space ''V''∗ has the following property: for any ''K''-vector spaces ''U'' an ...
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Rigid Category
In category theory, a branch of mathematics, a rigid category is a monoidal category where every object is rigid, that is, has a dual ''X''* (the internal Hom 'X'', 1 and a morphism 1 → ''X'' ⊗ ''X''* satisfying natural conditions. The category is called right rigid or left rigid according to whether it has right duals or left duals. They were first defined (following Alexander Grothendieck) by Neantro Saavedra Rivano in his thesis on Tannakian categories. Definition There are at least two equivalent definitions of a rigidity. *An object ''X'' of a monoidal category is called left rigid if there is an object ''Y'' and morphisms \eta_X : \mathbf \to X \otimes Y and \epsilon_X : Y \otimes X \to \mathbf such that both compositions X ~ \xrightarrow ~ (X \otimes Y) \otimes X ~ \xrightarrow ~ X \otimes (Y \otimes X) ~ \xrightarrow ~ X Y ~ \xrightarrow ~ Y \otimes (X \otimes Y ) ~ \xrightarrow ~ (Y \otimes X) \otimes Y ~ \xrightarrow ~ Y are identities. A right rigid ...
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Compact Closed Category
In category theory, a branch of mathematics, compact closed categories are a general context for treating dual objects. The idea of a dual object generalizes the more familiar concept of the dual of a finite-dimensional vector space. So, the motivating example of a compact closed category is FdVect, the category having finite-dimensional vector spaces as objects and linear maps as morphisms, with tensor product as the monoidal structure. Another example is Rel, the category having sets as objects and relations as morphisms, with Cartesian monoidal structure. Symmetric compact closed category A symmetric monoidal category (\mathbf,\otimes,I) is compact closed if every object A \in \mathbf C has a dual object. If this holds, the dual object is unique up to canonical isomorphism, and is denoted A^*. In a bit more detail, an object A^* is called the dual of A if it is equipped with two morphisms called the unit \eta_A:I\to A^*\otimes A and the counit \varepsilon_A ...
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Categorial Grammar
Categorial grammar is a family of formalisms in natural language syntax that share the central assumption that syntactic constituents combine as functions and arguments. Categorial grammar posits a close relationship between the syntax and semantic composition, since it typically treats syntactic categories as corresponding to semantic types. Categorial grammars were developed in the 1930s by Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz and in the 1950s by Yehoshua Bar-Hillel and Joachim Lambek. It saw a surge of interest in the 1970s following the work of Richard Montague, whose Montague grammar assumed a similar view of syntax. It continues to be a major paradigm, particularly within formal semantics. Basics A categorial grammar consists of two parts: a lexicon, which assigns a set of types (also called categories) to each basic symbol, and some type inference rules, which determine how the type of a string of symbols follows from the types of the constituent symbols. It has the advantage that the ...
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Lambek Calculus
Categorial grammar is a family of formalisms in natural language syntax that share the central assumption that syntactic constituents combine as functions and arguments. Categorial grammar posits a close relationship between the syntax and semantic composition, since it typically treats syntactic categories as corresponding to semantic types. Categorial grammars were developed in the 1930s by Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz and in the 1950s by Yehoshua Bar-Hillel and Joachim Lambek. It saw a surge of interest in the 1970s following the work of Richard Montague, whose Montague grammar assumed a similar view of syntax. It continues to be a major paradigm, particularly within formal semantics. Basics A categorial grammar consists of two parts: a lexicon, which assigns a set of types (also called categories) to each basic symbol, and some type inference rules, which determine how the type of a string of symbols follows from the types of the constituent symbols. It has the advantage that th ...
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