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We can vertically categorify a -category to an -category; I was wondering if there was a procedure of categorifying a -category to a -category, a -category to a -category, and so on (or maybe a direct procedure of categorifying a -category to an -category)? (I’m asking this because I want to know what the “-categorification” of the category of abelian groups should be, because it’s -categorification is the -category of spectra.) I hope this question makes sense, because I don’t have a very precise idea of what this -categorification should be.
There is never really a “procedure” for categorification. There are always many choices. What is a procedure is decategorification. By categorification one means anything that when followed by decategorification gets one back to where one started.
Sometimes one means something even more loose. For instance the decategorification of the -category of spectra to a 1-category (by quotienting out all higher morphisms, hence by passing to the homotopy category) is something still much bigger than the category of abelian groups. And nevertheless are spectra usefully regarded as an “-categorification” of abelian groups, namely in the sense that they “play the same role in -category theory as abelian groups play in 1-category theory”, roughly.
So if you want to make progress here, you may need to try to focus on something more concrete.
@Urs, Ok, I think I understand what you’re saying. I guess a bit more concrete question would be, what kind of things play the same role in -category theory as spectra play in -category theory and abelian groups play in -category theory. Do you know a way to approach this problem?
Let’s be careful and say “-category” and hence “-category” here, unless you really mean to think about -categories (recall (n,r)-category).
One possible answer is that the analog of abelian groups in -category theory are chain complexes of abelian groups concentrated in the lowest degrees. For more on this see at Dold-Kan correspondence.
@Urs How about in -category theory? (I think I may be asking a bit too much here!)
Have you already read and absorbed the entry on Dold-Kan correspondence?
Another possible answer would be spectra with homotopy groups concentrated in degrees . Although in either case, the lower bound is a bit odd.
On the other side of the homotopy hypothesis, the most direct analogue of an abelian group in 2-category theory would be a gadget which is sometimes known as a Picard groupoid: a groupoid equipped with the structure of a symmetric monoidal category, such that objects have inverses with respect to the monoidal structure. One can debate whether the weak or strict notion is more fundamental: I typically (probably against the grain) prefer the strict one.
However, there are other possible answers. One which has a more (2,2)-categorical rather than (2,1)-categorical flavour would be: something like the 2-category of abelian categories, possibly with some finiteness condition imposed (Grothendieck abelian categories, for instance).
I was actually thinking about @Mike’s method, but was worried about the same thing - the lower bound being odd. @Urs I read the entry on the Dold-Kan correspondence, but I still don’t know what the analogue might be in -category theory. The Dold-Kan correspondence basically states that the Dold-Kan construction is fully faithful, and is an equivalence when is idempotent complete, right (I forgot to mention that here is an additive category)? (Here consists of those chain complexes where for .)
Spectra are not the same as commutative monoid (is that what you mean by “algebra”?) objects in ; the closest connenction is that a connective spectrum can be identified with a commutative group object in .
@Mike Sorry, that was me being stupid! :-) I was thinking, how can we reconcile, in some suitable sense, all these different definitions of the -categorical analogue of abelian groups?
Sometimes you can’t reconcile such things. That’s what makes categorification an art, not something canonical.
What really puzzles me is how to reconcile these facts:
@ZhenLin: Doesn’t adding an extra limit cone for invertibility of elements force your infinite loop spaces to be group-like? It seems to me that arbitrary infinite loop spaces arise from Segal maps alone.
I don’t think Zhen’s question is about grouplikeness, but about the difference between (connective) spectra and -modules (the latter being equivalent to chain complexes). But I don’t quite understand where it goes from there; what is it that needs reconciling about those three facts?
The unavoidable conclusion is, of course, that the Lawvere -theory generated by the sketch for infinite loop spaces is not equivalent to the Lawvere theory for abelian groups. But how does that come about? What about other Lawvere theories – is the Lawvere theory of monoids equivalent to the Lawvere -theory for -spaces, or not?
As to how that comes about, it happens in plenty of other cases that categorification does not respect free objects. The inclusion of -categories into -categories for is a right adjoint, not a left adjoint, so it doesn’t tend to commute with left adjoints. But its left adjoint often does, i.e. if you truncate a free -categorical object down to an -categorical one, you often get the free -categorical object. A simpler example is that the free symmetric monoidal category on a set is not equivalent to the free commutative monoid on that set, but its 0-truncation is.
Right, of course. Perhaps a better way of phrasing my question is — are there any heuristics for guessing whether a the Lawvere -theory generated by a sketch is already 1-truncated? Of course, if there are “no equations” in the theory (e.g. the theory of objects) then there are no problems, but that’s not so useful. For instance, my understanding is that the Lawvere -theory generated by (as a sketch for monoids) is 1-truncated.
I can’t think of any offhand.
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