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I wrote a constructive definition of simple group, which brought up other issues, so I wrote antisubalgebra and strongly extensional function.
I have moved your section to within the Definition-section at simple group. Okay?
The constructive definition might benefit from some Lakatosian analysis. Toby, can you reconstruct some of your thought processes that led to this definition (the “proofs and refutations”, so to speak, that led to this formulation)?
All right, Todd, let’s see …
First I noticed the XOR in the classical definition, and I thought, usually this becomes IFF NOT (one way or the other) in a constructive setting, so I tried to see how it goes here.
The obvious example is , the subgroup of which consists of everything iff it consists of anything iff the proposition is true. Except that’s not a subgroup, so take its union with to get a subgroup . Since is false iff it’s not true, is iff it’s not all of .
Probably this definition (that a normal subgroup is trivial iff not improper) should also be in there, as the correct definition of a simple object in the category of all groups and all group homomorphisms. But that condition that is very unnatural to a constructivist. It would be nice to have a positive way to say that is proper.
The theory of antisubgroups of a group with a tight apartness (due, I believe, to Fred Richman) gives this: an antisubgroup is proper iff it’s inhabited. So now it sounds nice to say that a normal antisubgroup must be trivial iff it’s proper. (The trivial antisubgroup is the largest possible one: the one consisting of all .)
@Toby: I must say, this looks fascinating – thanks! I’d actually like to encourage you to say more about such thought processes within the nLab, for example explaining what is behind the precept in the first paragraph (after “All right, Todd,”) about XOR and IFF NOT. Such a peek into the mind of a constructivist could be valuable to someone!
I don’t have any suggestions for where to place such things, but you are probably in a better position to decide that than I am.
I've now added anticongruence relations and quotient algebras (not anti-quotients!) to antisubalgebra.
I also simplified some things at simple group. The definition in all cases is that a normal thing is trivial iff proper, so it's just a matter of seeing what things we're talking about and what ‘trivial’ and ‘proper’ mean for them.
Nice. DId you check with the Lombardi Quitte book ? I could be mistaken, but I expect them to take another route.
No, this is mostly based on A Course in Constructive Algebra by Mines, Richman, & Ruitenburg. Although I haven't actually read that book in years.
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