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by daxfohl
1312 days ago
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What does it mean, that it's replacing set theory? Is it more fundamental than set theory, in the sense that the latter can be defined in terms of it? Or is it different from set theory entirely, meaning different math comes from each? |
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Category theory works with collections, which can be modeled as sets -- or if you want to deal with categories of sets and other "large" categories -- as proper classes. And you can use a set theory that incorporates classes, like Morse-Kelley, to model this. IOW, it seems like category theory can be modeled in set theory.
On the other hand, I've not seen a rigorous set of axioms for category theory that didn't presuppose a notion of set or category or "collection".
Set theory also sheds a lot of light on what feel like foundational issues: sizes of sets, independence of axioms, etc.; I haven't seen something similar out of category theory.
Love for a category theory partisan to chime in with more here -- I'm definitely not an expert.