In this expository paper by Low it says:
Roughly speaking, a topos in the sense of Grothendieck is the category of sheaves on a kind of generalised space whose “points” may have non-trivial automorphisms.
Question 1: What does that mean?
In a footnote it says:
More precisely, every Grothendieck topos is equivalent to the topos of equivariant sheaves on a localic groupoid; see [Joyal and Tierney, 1984].
Still, I wonder how this is related to points having non-trivial automorphisms.
The MathSciNet review of the paper by Johnstone says:
Basically, it is about descent theory: the question of whether, given a morphism of toposes $f: \mathcal F → \mathcal E$, it is possible to reconstruct objects $X$ of $\mathcal E$ from objects $f^* X$ of $\mathcal F$ equipped with “descent data”.
Question 2: In simple terms, what is the motivation for that kind of problem, and what is descent data? Also, why does it say "objects $f^* X$" - isn't $f^* X$ a single object?
Further in the review:
The main theorem (VIII 2.1) asserts that every open surjection is an effective descent morphism.
Question 3: What is the idea of an effective descent morphism?
Coupling this with the result, essentially due to R. Diaconescu[Comm. Algebra 4 (1976), no. 8, 723–729; MR0414658], that every Grothendieck topos $\mathcal E$ admits an open surjection $\mathcal F → \mathcal E$ where $\mathcal F$ is localic, yields the authors’ second main theorem (VIII 3.2) which is a representation theorem asserting that an arbitrary Grothendieck topos is equivalent to the topos of “equivariant sheaves” on a groupoid in the category of locales.
Question 4: Why does VIII 2.1 together with the theorem of Diaconescu imply the second main theorem (the representation theorem)? (I'm only interested in getting an idea how these statements fit together, i.e., a very rough proof sketch suffices.)
In the introduction to [Joyal and Tierney, 1984] the authors write:
In fact, our first descent theorem for modules is completely analogous to the usual descent theorems of commutative algebra.
Question 5: What are the usual descent theorems in commutative algebra? I did not find anything comprehensible googling "descent theorems in commutative algebra".
Caveat: I expect that some people will react to this question saying "just read the books and papers yourself", but I find that it is quite hard to go through tons of technical definitions and lemmas without knowing the main idea in advance. This is why I am asking these questions: in order that I am able to read the papers and books myself. :-)
I also tried this MO thread but I can't make head nor tail of it. There it says the main questions of descent theory are:
- When an object $G$ in $C_Y$ is in the image via $f^*$ of some object in $C_X$ ?
- Classify all forms of object $G\in C_Y$, that is find all $E\in C_X$ for which $f^*(E)\cong G$.
This setting seems to be different from the setting in the third quote above, because here we consider $G\in C_Y$ which is in the codomain of $f^*$ whereas above we are given $X\in\mathcal E$, and $\mathcal E$ is the domain of $f^*$. This increases my confusion.