nLab decidable object

Redirected from "decidable objects".
Contents

Context

Category theory

Constructivism, Realizability, Computability

Contents

Idea

The concept of decidable object is the generalization to category theory of the concept of a decidable set from computability theory.

This corresponds to the algebraic and topological concepts unramified, respectively separable object, as pointed out by William Lawvere.

Definition

An object XX of a coherent category 𝒞\mathcal{C} is called decidable if its equality relation (i.e. its diagonal morphism)

Δ X:XX×X \Delta_X \;\colon\; X \longrightarrow X \times X

is complemented, as a subobject of the Cartesian product X×XX \times X.

A morphism f:ABf \colon A \to B is called decidable if it is a decidable object in the slice category 𝒞/B\mathcal{C}/B.

Remarks

  • For an object XX this means that in the internal logic of the category, it is true that “for any x,yXx,y\in X , either x=yx=y or xyx\neq y”.

  • In constructive mathematics, where Set is not assumed Boolean, one says that a set XX has decidable equality if it is a decidable object of Set\Set.

  • A decidable subobject simply means a complemented subobject. Again, in constructive mathematics, a decidable subobject in Set\Set is called a decidable subset.

  • An object XX in a topos \mathcal{E} is called anti-decidable if ¬¬(x=y)\neg\neg (x=y) in the internal language of \mathcal{E} holds for all x,yXx,y\in X. A formula φ\varphi is called almost decidable iff ¬φ¬¬φ\neg\varphi\vee\neg\neg\varphi holds and an object XX is called almost decidable if x=yx=y is almost decidable for xXx\in X.

Examples

Properties

The category of decidable objects in an topos is a Boolean pretopos. The category of decidable objects in a topos is only a topos when the original topos itself is a Boolean topos.

References

  • B. P. Chisala, M.-M. Mawanda, Counting Measure for Kuratowski Finite Parts and Decidability , Cah.Top.Géom.Diff.Cat. XXXII 4 (1991) pp.345-353. (pdf)

  • A. Carboni, G. Janelidze, Decidable (=separable) objects and morphisms in lextensive categories , JPAA 110 (1996) pp.219-240.

  • Peter Johnstone, Sketches of an Elephant vols. I,II, Oxford UP 2002.

Last revised on July 31, 2023 at 12:57:55. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.