Want to take part in these discussions? Sign in if you have an account, or apply for one below
Vanilla 1.1.10 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
An ordinary natural transformation F→G (F,G:C→D) can be converted into a functor I⨯C→D whose restrictions to {0}⨯C and {1}⨯D are F and G respectively. Here I={0→1}.
It seems to me that a pseudonatural transformation can likewise be converted to a 2-functor I⨯C→D. In particular, the morphism in the definition of a pseudonatural transformation can be encoded via the compositor isomorphisms for the maps (0,r)→(0,s)→(1,s).
Has this been written up somewhere?
If you’re saying “pseudonatural transformation” then you should probably say “pseudofunctor” to match. The small number of people who say “2-functor” to mean “weak 2-functor” probably also say “2-natural transformation” or just “natural transformation” to refer to the weak case.
Anyway, this is certainly “well-known”, but I don’t know a reference offhand, sorry.
Essentially this is asking for (a reference for) the cartesian closure of , for this implies that
All these “well-known” facts ought to be presented in any review of 2-category theory (and they ought to be stated on nLab pages), but (I looked through those we list at 2-category) they may all be folklore instead .
But people like to discuss something at least close, namely the Gray tensor product, which is a hack to make the above work while sticking to strict 2-categories.
From the respective discussion in
one can get close to (a reference for) the above pseudo-cartesian closure by combining their Thm. 12.2.20 with their Prop. 12.2.27 and then using the similarly “well known” fact that as bi-(i.e. weak-)2-categories.
(I am not saying this is a satisfactory answer to the question, just indicating that this gets at least close. Probably one has to keep chasing through literature on that Gray-business to stitch together a reference.)
1 to 3 of 3