In category theory, a Lawvere theory (named after American mathematician William Lawvere) is a category that can be considered a categorical counterpart of the notion of an equational theory.

Definition edit

Let   be a skeleton of the category FinSet of finite sets and functions. Formally, a Lawvere theory consists of a small category L with (strictly associative) finite products and a strict identity-on-objects functor   preserving finite products.

A model of a Lawvere theory in a category C with finite products is a finite-product preserving functor M : LC. A morphism of models h : MN where M and N are models of L is a natural transformation of functors.

Category of Lawvere theories edit

A map between Lawvere theories (LI) and (L′, I′) is a finite-product preserving functor that commutes with I and I′. Such a map is commonly seen as an interpretation of (LI) in (L′, I′).

Lawvere theories together with maps between them form the category Law.

Variations edit

Variations include multisorted (or multityped) Lawvere theory, infinitary Lawvere theory, and finite-product theory.[1]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  • Hyland, Martin; Power, John (2007), "The Category Theoretic Understanding of Universal Algebra: Lawvere Theories and Monads" (PDF), Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science, 172 (Computation, Meaning, and Logic: Articles dedicated to Gordon Plotkin): 437–458, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.158.5440, doi:10.1016/j.entcs.2007.02.019
  • Lawvere, William F. (1963), "Functorial Semantics of Algebraic Theories", PhD Thesis, vol. 50, no. 5, Columbia University, pp. 869–872, Bibcode:1963PNAS...50..869L, doi:10.1073/pnas.50.5.869, PMC 221940, PMID 16591125