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I added a brief section on Cantor’s theorem for posets to Cantor’s theorem, which in one form says that for posets there can be no surjective poset map (taking ).
You might find it amusing to try to prove this yourself in a pleasant way. I found one proof (you can find it here), but it’s possible I was working too hard for it. :-)
You have a in there at one point.
More seriously, I presume a similar proof would hold where we take the exponential as Heyting algebras? Not sure off the top of my head how different these are.
A minor suggestion: why not link to Yanofsky’s paper? Would be helpful for the reader.
Fixed the typo, and added the reference. Thanks.
Sorry, I’m not sure what your second paragraph is suggesting. Could you spell it out more?
Hmm, was wondering if Cantor’s theorem holds in the category of Heyting algebras. This obviously doesn’t help for the application in any way (fixed point theorems, leading to CSB), since that’s a result that requires classical logic.
So the “Cantor’s theorem” I was talking about takes place in a cartesian closed category, e.g. a topos or ; in each of those cases we are inquiring such that for suitable . The reason I was confused by #2 is that Heyting algebras do not form a cartesian closed category. But maybe you have a different formulation in mind.
Isn’t Knaster-Tarski a pretty big hammer for the conclusion that every monotone map has a fixed point? (-:
Mike: of course! :-)
In some sense that preamble I gave is a little silly, and perhaps a distraction to what I really wanted to record, which was Cantor’s theorem for posets, which I don’t think is an entirely obvious result. (Or maybe it’s more obvious than I think? You be the judge (-: ).
Ah, OK, I didn’t realise. Thanks!
I haven’t checked this carefully, but I’d imagine this follows from Lawvere’s theorem?
Bas, that’s the point: it doesn’t! At least, not in any way obvious to me.
Lawvere’s theorem implies that (in a cartesian closed category) if there is a point-surjective map of the form , then every endomap on has a fixed point. A typical application is to rule out an isomorphism because is known to have endomaps with no fixed point (e.g. when ). But for in , of course every endomap on does have a fixed point! So that method doesn’t work here; we have to look for something else.
Thanks. Sorry for the noise.
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