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For questions involving one or more categorical dimensions, or involving homotopy coherent categorical structures.

7 votes
1 answer
251 views

$K_1$ of Categories for intuition

Maybe there is no good answer to this, but I'm trying to get a feel for what the $K$-theory of a (permutative or symmetric monoidal $\infty$-)category computes. In algebraic $K$-theory, we have explic …
curious math guy's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
124 views

Abelianisation of Groupoids

I was wondering what a good source for the properties (or even the existence) of the abelianisation of a (2-) groupoid would be? A naive construction would certainly be to abelianise the automorphisms …
curious math guy's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
166 views

"Approximating" functors by Hom/Tensor product

Consider two dg-algebras $A,B$ and their respective derived categories $D(A),D(B)$. A natural way to give a covariant functor is to take an $(A,B)$-bimodule $X$ and to tensor with it, that is $$D(A)\t …
curious math guy's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
447 views

Do stalks see epimorphism of stacks?

Let $\mathcal{C}$ be a site and $f:\mathcal{F}\to \mathcal{G}$ a morphism of $2$-sheaves. According to https://mathoverflow.net/q/307366, this is an epimorphism if and only if it is almost surjective …
curious math guy's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
282 views

Limit of Hom-groupoid

For any groups $G,H$, we can define the category, in fact a groupoid, $$\underline{\text{Hom}}(G,H)$$ whose objects are group morphisms $G\to H$ and morphisms $(f:G\to H)\to (g:G\to H)$ are elements o …
curious math guy's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
169 views

Étale stack on $\text{Spec}(k)$

Let $\mathcal{F}:\text{Ét}(\text{Spec}(k))^{\mathrm{op}}\rightarrow \text{Set}$ be an étale presheaf. The étale sheaf condition for the cover $\text{Spec}(l)\rightarrow \text{Spec}(k)$ is $$\mathcal{F …
curious math guy's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
201 views

Morphisms of $\infty$-groupoids

As far as I understand, there are several ways of defining $\infty$-categories. One of them is to think of $\infty$-cateogries as $top$-enriched categories. Hence we can think of $\infty$-groupoids as …
curious math guy's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
248 views

Representation of fundamental groupoid as $2$-sheaf

By https://arxiv.org/abs/1406.4419 (The fundamental groupoid as a terminal costack, Ilia Pirashvili), we know that for a topological space $X$, the $2$-functor $$\text{Top}(X)\rightarrow \text{Gpd}, \ …
curious math guy's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
118 views

Dual of $n$-cosheaf is an $n$-sheaf?

For a site $\mathcal{C}$, an $n$-cosheaf is a functor $\mathcal{F}:\mathcal{C}\rightarrow $n$\text{-}\mathfrak{Cat}$ such that for any cover $(U_i\rightarrow U)_i$, we have $$\prod_{i,j}\mathcal{F}(U_ …
curious math guy's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
788 views

Truncation of infinity-categories

If we have a category $\mathcal{C}$, then we can see it as an $\infty$-category. Furthermore, we can truncate and $\infty$-category $\mathcal{X}$ to get a category $\mathcal{X}_{\leq 1}$. My question …
curious math guy's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
284 views

Deligne's theorem for $n$-topos

Deligne's theorem states that a coherent topos has enough points, i.e. that we can prove that a morphism of sheaves on a "nice" site is an isomorphism by showing that the induced morphism on stalks ar …
curious math guy's user avatar