Mitchell-Bénabou language (changes) in nLab
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Context
Topos Theory
Background
Toposes
Internal Logic
Topos morphisms
Cohomology and homotopy
In higher category theory
Theorems
Type theory
natural deduction metalanguage, practical foundations
type theory (dependent, intensional, observational type theory, homotopy type theory)
computational trinitarianism = \linebreak propositions as types +programs as proofs +relation type theory/category theory
Contents
Idea
The Mitchell–Bénabou language is a particularly simple form of the internal language of an elementary topos EE. It makes use of the fact that in the presence of a subobject classifier Ω\Omega, there is no need to treat formulas separately from terms, since a formula or proposition can be identified with a term of type Ω\Omega.
Specifically, the language is a type theory L(E)L(E) where:
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the variables of type AA are interpreted as identity morphisms id A:A→A\mathrm{id}_A: A \to A in EE;
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the terms of type BB in variables x ix_i of type X iX_i are interpreted as morphisms from the product of the X iX_i to BB
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the formulas are terms of type Ω\Omega, where Ω\Omega is the subobject classifier;
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the propositional logical connectives are induced from the internal Heyting algebra structure of Ω\Omega;
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the (type-bounded) quantifiers are induced from the internal completeness of Ω\Omega (i.e., the quantifiers are given by suitable morphisms from internal powers of Ω\Omega to Ω\Omega)
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for each type XX there are also two binary relations = X=_X (defined applying the diagonal map to the product term of the arguments) and ∈ X\in_X (defined applying the evaluation map to the product of the term and the power term of the arguments);
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a formula is true if the arrow which interprets it factors through the arrow true:1→Ωtrue: 1 \to \Omega.
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one can also construct type families and dependent types, just as in any locally cartesian closed category: the types indexed by elements of some closed type AA are the objects of the slice category over AA; sums and products of type families (i.e., Σ\Sigma- and Π\Pi-types) are given by the left and right adjoints to change-of-base functors, respectively. As these slice categories will be topoi themselves, all the above structure can be interpreted for type families as well.
Applications
The Mitchell–Bénabou language, like the internal logic of any category, is a powerful way to describe various objects in a topos as if they were sets. It can be viewed as making the topos into a generalized set theory or a type theory, so that we can write and prove statements in a topos, and properties of a topos, using first order intuitionistic predicate logic.
As is usual for type theories, we can conversely generate a syntactic or free topos E(L)E(L) from any suitable theory LL phrased in the above language. The universal property of this topos says that logical functors E(L)→EE(L)\to E, for any other topos EE, are equivalent to models of the theory LL in EE.
References
- Saunders MacLane, Ieke Moerdijk, Sheaves in Geometry and Logic, Springer (1992) [[doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-0927-0](https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-1-4612-0927-0)]
Last revised on January 15, 2024 at 09:54:21. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.