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.
Reposted from MO:
The mapping simplex: We define a functor sending the functor classifying the sequence
(notice that .) to the simplicial set defined as a representable functor as follows:
The identity map then determines a unique map by the fact that simplicial sets are colimits of their simplices.
Also, given a map corresponding to a functor (by full and faithfulness of the Yoneda embedding), it’s not hard to see that
Let be a functor classifying a sequence of composable maps
Then let be the constant functor at . Then by the functoriality of , we have a map induced by the obvious natural transformation , which is defined componentwise as the composite map for each (the naturality of this map is immediate).
Notice that for any simplicial set is canonically isomorphic to the product since
Let be the obvious inclusion on the last objects of , and let be a functor parameterizing a sequence of composable maps
Let , which parameterizes the sequence:
(yes, the indexing is annoying, since ).
Also, let be the constant functor at , and let . We also define a third sequence to be the sequence
which extends by the empty object on the right. It is immediate from the definition that we have a canonical isomorphism . This gives us a natural inclusion
Then we apparently have the following pushout square:
Claim:
Then why does the claim hold?
Does anyone know how to show this? It’s geometrically obvious, but I’m having a rough time showing it to be true. The mapping properties are in exactly the wrong directions =(.
Alright, I think I answered my own question on MO. Any chance anyone can tell me if the proof works?
1 to 3 of 3