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In the setting of LSR on mode theories, could one think of trifibrations over a mode 2-category, , as classified by a map from to the 2-category of adjoint triples?
Re #2: yes.
I’m not a fan of the “trifibration” terminology, because a “bifibration” is “a fibration in two ways”, whereas a “trifibration” is not a “fibration in three ways”. Also it leaves no terminology remaining for a fibration whose transition functors have right adjoints but not left adjoints. In FBMF I called trifibrations “-bifibrations”, with “-fibrations” for the case of only right adjoints.
I copied over Pavlovic’s definition. Is there are better way to speak of his ?
I think this is usually called the dual fibration – I just created a stub for that, and suggest the notation (or or somesuch) over .
I adopted Noam’s suggestion of for the dual fibration and linked to it, and I added in the reference to Mike’s Framed bicategories and monoidal fibrations.
Re #3, so shall we adopt your naming convention?
Well, I won’t insist if I’m in the minority. What do others think?
Regarding notation, I agree that is poor since that looks like it’s referring to the opposite of the total category. What about or ?
To be clear, is the use of in -(bi)fibration just alluding to the existence of ?
Yes.
I guess there is a precedent for reliance on the vagaries of notation choice. There is -autonomous category based on the use of to mark dual vector spaces. (By the way, why ’autonomous’?)
Then perhaps the choice of in #4 would fit well.
Precedent, maybe, but not necessarily good precedent. (-:O
Well that did worry me. Is there any reason we should prefer your use of ? There’s no natural reason for the use of in the adjoints.
No natural reason, no, but at least they’re fairly well established. I suppose we could say something like “-fibration”, with “-fibration” being another name for a bifibration; that would also be based on notation but at least somewhat more specific than . On the other hand, it might also be taken to imply Beck-Chevalley conditions (since indexed products do have such a condition), which isn’t part of the definition we’re talking about here.
(Re: “why autonomous”, some people used to use the bare adjective “autonomous” for a closed monoidal category, or sometimes for a compact closed monoidal category, but it seems to not have survived very far. I suppose the intuition in those cases is that with internal-hom objects the category is “sufficient unto itself” without needing hom-sets, or some such.)
I see ’trifibration’ is also used in a multivariable adjunction setting here
In case this wasn’t clear to anyone else (it wasn’t to me until I looked at the paper), Guitart’s “trifibrations” are something totally different. They are the discrete fibrations over triple products that correspond to the common value of the functors associated to a “mutual right” two-variable adjunction, i.e. a morphism in the polycategory of multivariable adjunctions. In particular, definitely not any kind of generalization of the present meaning of “bifibration”.
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