constructive mathematics, realizability, computability
propositions as types, proofs as programs, computational trinitarianism
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.
An object of a coherent category is called decidable if its equality relation (i.e. its diagonal morphism)
is complemented, as a subobject of the Cartesian product .
A morphism is called decidable if it is a decidable object in the slice category .
For an object this means that in the internal logic of the category, it is true that “for any , either or ”.
In constructive mathematics, where Set is not assumed Boolean, one says that a set has decidable equality if it is a decidable object of .
A decidable subobject simply means a complemented subobject. Again, in constructive mathematics, a decidable subobject in is called a decidable subset.
An object in a topos is called anti-decidable if in the internal language of holds for all . A formula is called almost decidable iff holds and an object is called almost decidable if is almost decidable for .
An initial object and terminal object are always decidable, and so is every natural numbers object in a topos
A subobject of a decidable object is decidable.
Decidable morphisms in the opposite of the category of commutative rings are precisely the separable -algebras .
Of course, in a Boolean category, every object is decidable. Conversely in a topos , or more generally a coherent category with a subobject classifier, every object is decidable precisely if is Boolean.
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.
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.