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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
@TimCampion Thanks, sorry can you specify the result you're using for "compute the left adjoint on representables pretty easily to see it agrees with the dold kan functor"? I tried to use the fact that every colimit-preserving functor out of a presheaf category has a right adjoint (determined by value on representables), but DK is the left adjoint. Or are you using that Ch(CMon) is embedded in a presheaf category...?
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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
@ChrisSchommer-Pries I agree that your construction gives a left inverse to $\mathrm{DK}$. To prove $\mathrm{DK}$ is full, I seem to need that your construction is a faithful functor. Is this obvious/true?
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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
Ah, of course, thank you both for the clarification! In that case I believe the original logic stands, and Chris's suggestion answers my question allowing me to generalize full faithfulness to any semiadditive category.
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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
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Algebraic vector bundles on affine punctured plane
@MahdiMajidi-Zolbanin Sorry to revive this old question, I don't understand the deduction from Corollary 4.1.1, which implies that the restriction of $M_{(X,Y)}$ to the punctured spectrum of $\mathbb{C}[X,Y]_{(X,Y)}$ is a trivial bundle. How do we know $M_{(X,Y)}$ is trivial on the entire spectrum?
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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
@ChrisSchommer-Pries Update: I believe you are correct. Some confusion stemmed from different notation between Lurie and Goerss-Jardine. Regardless, your functor is a proper left inverse to what I've called $\mathrm{DK}$ and I will be happy if you post as an answer.
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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
That is indeed a chain complex and functorial. It occurs to me that the original Dold-Kan defines this complex with differential $(-1)^{n}d_n$ only so that the natural map into the Moore complex is a chain map, which is needed for the other direction of equivalence. In any case, I think your functor $\widetilde{N}$ is indeed a left inverse to $\mathrm{DK}$ via the usual proof. In this case I hope you will post this as an answer.
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Is the (inverse) Dold-Kan functor fully faithful on chain complexes of commutative monoids?
Thanks, for the nice reference. Unfortunately the main object of study in that paper is a functor back sA -> Ch(A), which a priori we don’t have here.
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$\infty$-ary tensor product on a category
Regarding Martin's third example and making a choice $A\to I$ natural in $A$: since, as you said, the $I\to I$ component should be an isomorphism, any $f,g\colon I\to A$ are necessarily equal by naturality, and thus $I$ is initial in $\mathcal{C}$. Therefore the construction works for semicocartesian categories (with a sequentially cocontinuous product). Just naming what you already wrote for future readers.