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Hi, All. I am reading through McLarty’s axiomatization of category of categories, and here is a theorem that I cannot understand. It might be my silly or have forgotten some basics, but it has annoyed me for several hours.
The paper “Axiomatizing category of categories” is here
On page 1245, Theorem 5 states:
Let and be composable arrows of any category . If is an identity arrow then
And the proof says:
Theorem 4 plus chasing through the pushout for .
I think to be able to use Theorem 4, we need the unique arrow induced by the pair to factorize through the one induced by and . if such factorization does not exist, I do not see any chance of applying theorem 4.
I think there is some condition that pushout arrow induced by of and factors though the pushout arrow induced by and , and the case described in Theorem 5 of the paper satisfies the condition. If there is a condition, what is it? (I agree with the intuition that if two pairs of things have the same shape, then their pushout should have a “same fragment”, my trouble is to figure out how it formally happens.)
Thanks for any hint and attempt to help!
May I suggest editing your post to use markdown formatting for the long url? Like this [link text](http://reallyoverlylongurl.com)
Edited! Thanks for the suggestion!
I think one place to start is with the universal case, namely taking the category to be .
I think there are only 6 maps , so I think the case is can be shown using case-by-case argument.
It seems to me the claim is:
If Theorem 3 holds for is , then it for all ’s. I believe this is true if: 1. is indeed universal, in the following sense. 2.Theorem 5 holds for 3.
But it is not clear to me that the case for is is a universal case. Expand the “sense of universal”, it means:
For every composable pair such that factors through , there is a pair of composable arrows such that factors through , and exists arrow such that and . I am struggling on proving this.
Thanks for correcting me if my sense of “universal” is wrong here!
Update: I just realised that I have not used the fact that retracts to , I will retry tomorrow.
I have convinced myself that is indeed universal. Thank you very much for the useful hint!
Excellent, glad it helped!
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