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I am reading this paper on Homotopy for functors by Ming-Jung Lee.

The author gives a definition (at the beginning of section $3$) as follows :

Let $\varphi,\varphi':\Lambda\rightarrow \Gamma$ be covariant functors of small categories. We say that $\varphi$ is homotopic to $\varphi'$ if there are covariant functors $\varphi_i:\Lambda\rightarrow \Gamma$ for $i=0,1,\cdots,n$ such that $\varphi_0=\varphi,\varphi_n=\varphi'$ and for each $i$, there is a natural transformation between $\varphi_i$ and $\varphi_{i+1}$.

Given two natural transformations, there is an obvious way to compose them which gives a natural transformation.

What is the point of considering the finite collection of natural transformations between given two functors. We can just define that two functors are homotopic if there is a natural transformation between them.

I do not understand what I am missing. Any suggestions are helpful.

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    $\begingroup$ maybe the authors meant that there is a Zig-Zag of natural transformations, but this is just speculation. $\endgroup$ Commented May 28, 2018 at 4:51
  • $\begingroup$ I do not know what is a Zig-Zag of natural transformation.. Do you mean something like $F_0\rightrightarrows F_1\leftleftarrows F_2 \leftleftarrows F_3\rightrightarrows F_4$ where $F_i$ are functors and $\rightrightarrows$ means a natural transformation from right side functor to left side functor and $\leftleftarrows$ means a natural transformation from left side functor to right side functor @HenrikRüping $\endgroup$ Commented May 28, 2018 at 4:57
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    $\begingroup$ @Praphulla Yes. I guess the author means to interpret "there is a natural transformation between $\phi_i$ and $\phi_{i+1}$" without specifying the direction of the natural transformation. $\endgroup$
    – mme
    Commented May 28, 2018 at 5:00
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    $\begingroup$ Given the definition and interpreting it as Mike Miller suggested, there will be a homotopy of the continuous maps of spaces that are the geometric realisation of the given functors, since the geometric realisation of an arbitrary natural transformation is a homotopy (and hence invertible) $\endgroup$
    – David Roberts
    Commented May 28, 2018 at 5:48
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    $\begingroup$ I don't think it is necessary to delete this question; I think you could summarize the comments in a community-wiki answer and accept it. $\endgroup$ Commented May 28, 2018 at 14:55

2 Answers 2

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The author means there is a zigzag of natural transformations. That is, "a natural transformation between $\varphi_i$ and $\varphi_{i+1}$" is intended to be nonspecific as to the direction of the transformation: it could go from $\varphi_i$ to $\varphi_{i+1}$ or from $\varphi_{i+1}$ to $\varphi_{i}$.

This is a reasonable notion of "homotopy" between functors because upon passing to geometric realizations / classifying spaces, any natural transformation induces a homotopy in the topological sense, and homotopies in the latter sense can always be reversed as well as composed; thus any zigzag of natural transformations between functors induces a single homotopy between their geometric realizations.

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This may not be an answer but too long for a comment!

Though I did not read your mentioned paper https://www.ams.org/journals/proc/1972-036-02/S0002-9939-1972-0334212-5/S0002-9939-1972-0334212-5.pdf in details but what I understood from the Peter May's answer here Homotopy of functors that if you define a homotopy between 2 covariant functors $F,G :C \rightarrow D$ as a natural transformation between them then this notion of "homotopy" will not induce an expected equivalence relation on the set of functors from $C$ to $D$. So to solve this problem Ming-jung Lee defined a notion of "homotopy" between $F$ and $G$ as a sequence of covariant functors $\phi_1,....\phi_n:C \rightarrow D$ such that $\phi_1=F$ and $\phi_n=G$ and such that for each $i$ there exists a natural transformation between $\phi_i$ and $\phi_{i+1}$(where the direction of each natural transformation is unspecified). Also as mentioned in corollary 8 in https://www.ams.org/journals/proc/1972-036-02/S0002-9939-1972-0334212-5/S0002-9939-1972-0334212-5.pdf that if $F$ and $G$ are "homotopic" then the induced continuous maps $BF$ and $BG$ between geometric realisations $BC$ and $BD$ of the morphism complexes $MC$ and $MD$ respectively are also homotopic. So the notion of "homotopy" as mentioned by Ming-Jung Lee seems reasonable..

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  • $\begingroup$ David Roberts said the same in his comments.. Saying something more than once only makes it easier to understand (most of the times).. So, +1... Thanks for reference to Peter May's answer... $\endgroup$ Commented May 7, 2020 at 2:06

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