| I never understood this either... 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. |
I'm no expert, but I do want to point out that you'll never see a set of axioms for set theory that doesn't also presuppose some realm from which sets themselves are drawn. The question is not whether sets exist; it's whether the collection of them can be represented within the theory. It is well-known (in certain circles...) that the realm of all sets cannot itself be described by a set.
In the same way, category theory may assume the existence of collections of objects and arrows, but these collections are not themselves represented within category theory. The category of all categories encounters exactly the same size issues as does the set of all sets.
There are different ways around these size issues. I think a lot of people go with something like Russell's stratified hierarchy of universes -- but this is also done in set theory, like with the alternative to ZFC based on sets and classes. (But what is the class of all classes!? You just keep building bigger universes.)