Teachers Paradise School Supplies Teacher Resources Free Encyclopedia
Teachers Paradise FREE Teaching Resources
Home Arts Crafts Audio Visual Equipment Office Supplies Teacher Resources
Main Page | Edit this page

Topos

In mathematics, a topos (plural: topoi or toposes - this is a contentious topic) is a type of category which allows the formulation of all of mathematics inside it.

Table of contents
1 Introduction
2 History
3 Formal definition
4 References

Introduction

Traditionally, mathematics is built on set theory, and all objects studied in mathematics are ultimately sets and functions. It has been argued that category theory could provide a better foundation for mathematics. By analyzing precisely which properties of the category of sets and functions are needed to express mathematics, one arrives at the definition of topoi, and one can then formulate mathematics inside any topos. Of course, the category of sets forms a topos, but that is boring. In more interesting topoi, the axiom of choice may no longer be valid, or the law of excluded middle (every proposition is either true or false) may break down. It is thus of some interest to collect those theorems which are valid in all topoi, not just in the topos of sets.

One may also work in a particular topos in order to concentrate only on certain objects. For instance, constructivists may be interested in the topos of all "constructible" sets and functions in some sense. If symmetry under a particular group G is of importance, one can use the topos consisting of all G-sets. Other important examples of topoi are categories of sheaves on a topological space.

It is also possible to encode a logical theory, such as the theory of all groupss, in a topos. The individual models of the theory, i.e. the groups in our example, then correspond to functors from the encoding topos to the category of sets that respect the topos structure.

History

Main article: Background and genesis of topos theory

The historical origin of topos theory is algebraic geometry. Alexander Grothendieck generalized the concept of a sheaf. The result is the category of sheaves with respect to a Grothendieck topology - also called a Grothendieck topos. F. W. Lawvere realized the logical content of this structure, and his axioms lead to the current notion. Note that Lawvere's notion, initially called elementary topos, is more general than Grothendieck's, and is the one that's nowadays simply called "topos".

Formal definition

A topos is a category which has the following two properties:

From this one can derive that

References




Pay for Educational Supplies & Teaching Supplies with Visa, Master Card, American Express, Discover or Paypal.
TeachersParadise.com HOME | Safe Shopping Guarantee | Help Desk
All trademarks & brands are the property of their respective owners.
Legal Notice 2000-2008 TeachersParadise.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved