Twisted Cubes and their Applications in Type Theory
This thesis captures the ongoing development of twisted cubes, which is a modification of cubes (in a topological sense) where its homotopy type theory does not require paths or higher paths to be invertible. My original motivation to develop the twisted cubes was to resolve the incompatibility betw...
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Zusammenfassung: | This thesis captures the ongoing development of twisted cubes, which is a
modification of cubes (in a topological sense) where its homotopy type theory
does not require paths or higher paths to be invertible. My original motivation
to develop the twisted cubes was to resolve the incompatibility between cubical
type theory and directed type theory. The development of twisted cubes is still
in the early stages and the intermediate goal, for now, is to define a twisted
cube category and its twisted cubical sets that can be used to construct a
potential definition of (infinity, n)-categories. The intermediate goal above
leads me to discover a novel framework that uses graph theory to transform
convex polytopes, such as simplices and (standard) cubes, into base categories.
Intuitively, an n-dimensional polytope is transformed into a directed graph
consists 0-faces (extreme points) of the polytope as its nodes and 1-faces of
the polytope as its edges. Then, we define the base category as the full
subcategory of the graph category induced by the family of these graphs from
all n-dimensional cases. With this framework, the modification from cubes to
twisted cubes can formally be done by reversing some edges of cube graphs.
Equivalently, the twisted n-cube graph is the result of a certain endofunctor
being applied n times to the singleton graph; this endofunctor (called twisted
prism functor) duplicates the input, reverses all edges in the first copy, and
then pairwisely links nodes from the first copy to the second copy. The core
feature of a twisted graph is its unique Hamiltonian path, which is useful to
prove many properties of twisted cubes. In particular, the reflexive transitive
closure of a twisted graph is isomorphic to the simplex graph counterpart,
which remarkably suggests that twisted cubes not only relate to (standard)
cubes but also simplices. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2307.01327 |