Higher Topos Theory (AM-170)

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Princeton University Press, Jul 26, 2009 - Mathematics - 925 pages

Higher category theory is generally regarded as technical and forbidding, but part of it is considerably more tractable: the theory of infinity-categories, higher categories in which all higher morphisms are assumed to be invertible. In Higher Topos Theory, Jacob Lurie presents the foundations of this theory, using the language of weak Kan complexes introduced by Boardman and Vogt, and shows how existing theorems in algebraic topology can be reformulated and generalized in the theory's new language. The result is a powerful theory with applications in many areas of mathematics.


The book's first five chapters give an exposition of the theory of infinity-categories that emphasizes their role as a generalization of ordinary categories. Many of the fundamental ideas from classical category theory are generalized to the infinity-categorical setting, such as limits and colimits, adjoint functors, ind-objects and pro-objects, locally accessible and presentable categories, Grothendieck fibrations, presheaves, and Yoneda's lemma. A sixth chapter presents an infinity-categorical version of the theory of Grothendieck topoi, introducing the notion of an infinity-topos, an infinity-category that resembles the infinity-category of topological spaces in the sense that it satisfies certain axioms that codify some of the basic principles of algebraic topology. A seventh and final chapter presents applications that illustrate connections between the theory of higher topoi and ideas from classical topology.

 

Contents

II
1
III
26
IV
53
V
55
VI
72
VII
95
VIII
114
IX
145
XXI
414
XXII
455
XXIII
526
XXIV
527
XXV
569
XXVI
593
XXVII
632
XXVIII
651

X
147
XI
169
XII
204
XIII
223
XIV
240
XV
261
XVI
292
XVII
311
XVIII
312
XIX
331
XX
377
XXIX
682
XXX
683
XXXI
711
XXXII
742
XXXIII
781
XXXV
803
XXXVI
844
XXXVII
909
XXXVIII
915
XXXIX
923
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About the author (2009)

Jacob Lurie is associate professor of mathematics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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