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I started at cohesive (infinity,1)-topos a section van Kampen theorem
In the cohesive -topos itself the theorem holds trivially. The interesting part is, I think, to which extent it restricts to the concrete cohesive objects under the embedding .
The page cohesive infinity-topos doesn’t exist! But your other link works.
Thanks, fixed.
I shouldn’t have gotten myself distracted by this, since I need to be doing something else, but nevertheless I did spend some time now on expanding and polishing my purported proof of the higher van Kampen theorem using cohesive -topos technology here.
I worked a bit more to polish the argument that the pushout of topological spaces remains a homotopy pushout after the embedding of the spaces as 0-truncated topological -groupoids.
One can see this directly with a bit of effort, I think, but one can also fall back to the 1-categorical van Kampen theorem to see this, which is maybe noteworthy:
for
a cover of the topological space by two open subsets, pick a good open cover of , call the Cech nerve and write for the Cech nerves of the restriction to those open subsets that land in . Then one can show that the ordinary pushout
of simplicial presheaves over open balls is a homotopy pushout. So the question is if this is again equivalent to .
Since all objects are 0-truncated, it suffices to check that the 1-truncation of the pushout is . It is easy to see that agrees. To see that of the pushout vanishes (the categorical not the geometric one!!) pass objectwise to the geometric realization and then use the ordinary 1-van Kampen theorem.
I made it overly complicated by working in the projective model structure. Using the injective structure the whole statement becomes trivial. We can prove higher van Kampen in a single line.
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