2-categories
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In
category theory Category theory is a general theory of mathematical structures and their relations that was introduced by Samuel Eilenberg and Saunders Mac Lane in the middle of the 20th century in their foundational work on algebraic topology. Nowadays, cate ...
, a strict 2-category is a
category Category, plural categories, may refer to: Philosophy and general uses * Categorization, categories in cognitive science, information science and generally *Category of being * ''Categories'' (Aristotle) *Category (Kant) *Categories (Peirce) * ...
with "
morphism In mathematics, particularly in category theory, a morphism is a structure-preserving map from one mathematical structure to another one of the same type. The notion of morphism recurs in much of contemporary mathematics. In set theory, morphisms a ...
s between morphisms", that is, where each
hom-set In mathematics, particularly in category theory, a morphism is a structure-preserving map from one mathematical structure to another one of the same type. The notion of morphism recurs in much of contemporary mathematics. In set theory, morphisms a ...
itself carries the structure of a category. It can be formally defined as a category enriched category, enriched over Cat (the Category of small categories, category of categories and functors, with the monoidal category, monoidal structure given by product category, product of categories). The concept of 2-category was first introduced by Charles Ehresmann in his work on enriched categories in 1965. The more general concept of bicategory (or ''weak'' 2-''category''), where composition of morphisms is associative only up to a 2-isomorphism, was introduced in 1968 by Jean Bénabou.Jean Bénabou, Introduction to bicategories, in Reports of the Midwest Category Seminar, Springer, Berlin, 1967, pp. 1--77.


Definition

A 2-category C consists of: * A Class (set theory), class of 0-''cells'' (or ''Object (category theory), objects'') , , .... * For all objects and , a category \mathbf(A,B). The objects f,g: A \to B of this category are called 1-''cells'' and its morphisms \alpha: f \Rightarrow g are called 2-''cells''; the composition in this category is usually written \circ or \circ_1 and called ''vertical composition'' or ''composition along a'' 1-''cell''. * For any object  there is a functor from the terminal object, terminal
category Category, plural categories, may refer to: Philosophy and general uses * Categorization, categories in cognitive science, information science and generally *Category of being * ''Categories'' (Aristotle) *Category (Kant) *Categories (Peirce) * ...
(with one object and one arrow) to \mathbf(A,A) that picks out the Identity morphism, identity 1-cell  on and its identity 2-cell . In practice these two are often denoted simply by . * For all objects , and , there is a functor \circ_0 \colon \mathbf(B,C) \times \mathbf(A,B) \to \mathbf(A,C), called ''horizontal composition'' or ''composition along a 0-cell'', which is associative and admits the identity 1 and 2-cells of as identities. Here, associativity for \circ_0 means that horizontally composing \mathbf(C,D)\times\mathbf(B,C)\times\mathbf(A,B) twice to \mathbf(A,D) is independent of which of the two \mathbf(C,D)\times\mathbf(B,C) and \mathbf(B,C)\times\mathbf(A,B) are composed first. The composition symbol \circ_0 is often omitted, the horizontal composite of 2-cells \alpha\colon f\Rightarrow g\colon A\to B and \beta\colon f'\Rightarrow g'\colon B\to C being written simply as \beta\alpha\colon f'f\Rightarrow g'g\colon A\to C. The notion of 2-category differs from the more general notion of a bicategory in that composition of 1-cells (horizontal composition) is required to be strictly associative, whereas in a bicategory it needs only be associative up to a 2-isomorphism. The axioms of a 2-category are consequences of their definition as Cat-enriched categories: * Vertical composition is associative and unital, the units being the identity 2-cells . * Horizontal composition is also (strictly) associative and unital, the units being the identity 2-cells on the identity 1-cells . * The interchange law holds; i.e. it is true that for composable 2-cells \alpha,\beta,\gamma,\delta ::(\alpha\circ_0\beta)\circ_1(\gamma\circ_0\delta) = (\alpha\circ_1\gamma)\circ_0(\beta\circ_1\delta) The interchange law follows from the fact that \circ_0 is a functor between hom categories. It can be drawn as a pasting diagram as follows: Here the left-hand diagram denotes the vertical composition of horizontal composites, the right-hand diagram denotes the horizontal composition of vertical composites, and the diagram in the centre is the customary representation of both.


Doctrines

In mathematics, a doctrine is simply a 2-category which is heuristically regarded as a system of theories. For example, algebraic theory, algebraic theories, as invented by William Lawvere, is an example of a doctrine, as are multi-sorted theory, multi-sorted theories, operads, category (mathematics), categories, and topos (mathematics), toposes. The objects of the 2-category are called ''theories'', the 1-morphisms f\colon A\rightarrow B are called ''models'' of the in , and the 2-morphisms are called ''morphisms between models.'' The distinction between a 2-category and a doctrine is really only heuristic: one does not typically consider a 2-category to be populated by theories as objects and models as morphisms. It is this vocabulary that makes the theory of doctrines worth while. For example, the 2-category Cat of categories, functors, and natural transformations is a doctrine. One sees immediately that all presheaf category, presheaf categories are categories of models. As another example, one may take the subcategory of Cat consisting only of categories with finite products as objects and product-preserving functors as 1-morphisms. This is the doctrine of multi-sorted algebraic theories. If one only wanted 1-sorted algebraic theories, one would restrict the objects to only those categories that are generated under products by a single object. Doctrines were discovered by Jonathan Mock Beck.


See also

* n-category, ''n''-category *


References


Footnotes

* ''Generalised algebraic models'', by Claudia Centazzo.


External links

* {{Category theory Higher category theory