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\newtheorem{prop}{Proposition} \newtheorem{cor}{Corollary} \newtheorem*{utheorem}{Theorem} \newtheorem*{ulemma}{Lemma} \newtheorem*{uprop}{Proposition} \newtheorem*{ucor}{Corollary} \theoremstyle{definition} \newtheorem{defn}{Definition} \newtheorem{example}{Example} \newtheorem*{udefn}{Definition} \newtheorem*{uexample}{Example} \theoremstyle{remark} \newtheorem{remark}{Remark} \newtheorem{note}{Note} \newtheorem*{uremark}{Remark} \newtheorem*{unote}{Note} %------------------------------------------------------------------- \begin{document} %------------------------------------------------------------------- \section*{opposite magma} \hypertarget{opposite_magmas_monoids__groups__rings__algebras}{}\section*{{Opposite magmas (monoids / groups / rings / algebras)}}\label{opposite_magmas_monoids__groups__rings__algebras} \noindent\hyperlink{idea}{Idea}\dotfill \pageref*{idea} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{definitions}{Definitions}\dotfill \pageref*{definitions} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{in_}{In $Set$}\dotfill \pageref*{in_} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{in_other_categories}{In other categories}\dotfill \pageref*{in_other_categories} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{commutative_magmas}{Commutative magmas}\dotfill \pageref*{commutative_magmas} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{categorifications}{Categorifications}\dotfill \pageref*{categorifications} \linebreak \noindent\hyperlink{related_concepts}{Related concepts}\dotfill \pageref*{related_concepts} \linebreak \hypertarget{idea}{}\subsection*{{Idea}}\label{idea} Every [[magma]] $A$ has an opposite $A^op$ in which the operation goes the other direction. This is especially applied when $A$ is a [[monoid]], [[group]], [[ring]], or algebra ([[nonassociative algebra|nonassociative]] or [[associative algebra|associative]]). \hypertarget{definitions}{}\subsection*{{Definitions}}\label{definitions} \hypertarget{in_}{}\subsubsection*{{In $Set$}}\label{in_} Let $A$ be a [[magma]], that is a [[set]] ${|A|}$ equipped with a [[binary operation]] ${|A|} \times {|A|} \to {|A|}$ written as multiplication or juxtaposition. Then the same set ${|A|}$ may be equipped with another binary operation which we will write as $*$. Specifically, \begin{equation} x * y \coloneqq y x . \label{elementDefinition}\end{equation} This defines a new magma, the \textbf{opposite} of $A$, denoted $A^op$ (also sometimes $A^*$ or $A^\perp$). If $A$ is a [[monoid]] or a [[group]] (or [[semigroup]], [[quasigroup]], [[quasigroup|loop]], etc), the same definition applies, and we see that $A^op$ is again a monoid or a group (etc). If $A$ is a [[ring]] or a $K$-[[nonassociative algebra|algebra]], the same definition applies, and we see that $A^op$ is again a ring or a $K$-algebra (including such special cases of algebra as an [[associative algebra]], [[Lie algebra]], etc). However, one can also interpret this situation as internal to [[Ab]] or $K\,$[[Mod]]; see below. \hypertarget{in_other_categories}{}\subsubsection*{{In other categories}}\label{in_other_categories} The notion of magma makes sense [[internalisation|in]] any [[monoidal category]] $C$. The notion of opposite does not make sense in this general context, because we must switch the order of the variables $x$ and $y$ in \eqref{elementDefinition}. It does make sense in a [[braided monoidal category]], although now there are two ways to write it, depending on whether we use the [[braiding]] or its [[inverse morphism|inverse]] to switch the variables. In a [[symmetric monoidal category]], the definition not only makes sense but gives the same result either way. In particular, a magma object in $K\,$[[Mod]] is a [[nonassociative algebra]] over $K$, a monoid object in $K Mod$ is an [[associative algebra]] over $K$, and a monoid object in [[Ab]] is a [[ring]]. So all of these have opposites. \hypertarget{commutative_magmas}{}\subsection*{{Commutative magmas}}\label{commutative_magmas} If $A$ is [[commutativity|commutative]], then $A^op \cong A$. In fact, this [[isomorphism]] lives [[over category|over]] $Set$ (or over the underlying monoidal category $C$), so we may write $A^op = A$ to denote this. \hypertarget{categorifications}{}\subsection*{{Categorifications}}\label{categorifications} The concept of monoid may be [[horizontal categorification|oidified]] to that of [[category]]; the concept of opposite monoid is then oidified to that of [[opposite category]]. The concept of monoid may also be [[vertical categorification|categorified]] to that of [[monoidal category]]; the concept of opposite monoid is then categorified to that of [[opposite monoidal category]]. In particular, a monoidal category $A$ has \emph{two} kinds of opposites: one as a mere category (an oidified monoid) and one as a monoidal object (a categorified monoid). We denote the first as $A^op$ and the second as $A^co$. If we categorify \emph{and} oidify, then we get the concept of [[2-category]]. Again, a $2$-category $A$ has $2$ kinds of opposites, again denoted $A^op$ and $A^co$. So $A^op$ reverses the [[1-morphisms]] while $A^co$ reverses the [[2-morphisms]]. See [[opposite 2-category]]. An $n$-[[n-category|category]] has $n$ kinds of opposites. See (or write) [[opposite n-category]]. A [[monoidal n-category]] has $n + 1$ kinds of opposites. \hypertarget{related_concepts}{}\subsection*{{Related concepts}}\label{related_concepts} \begin{itemize}% \item under [[delooping]] a [[monoid]] to a pointed one-object [[category]], passing to the opposite monoid corresponds to passing to the [[opposite category]]. \end{itemize} [[!redirects opposite magma]] [[!redirects opposite magmas]] [[!redirects opposite monoid]] [[!redirects opposite monoids]] [[!redirects opposite group]] [[!redirects opposite groups]] [[!redirects opposite ring]] [[!redirects opposite rings]] [[!redirects opposite algebra]] [[!redirects opposite algebras]] \end{document}