All Questions

Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
15 votes
3 answers
1k views

Why it is convenient to be cartesian closed for a category of spaces?

In 1967 Steenrod wrote what later became a quite celebrated paper, A convenient category of topological spaces (Michigan Math. J. 14 (1967) 133–152). The paper conveys the work of many (among the most ...
4 votes
0 answers
68 views

Need to know if a certain full subcategory of Top is cartesian closed

Consider the full subcategory of Top consisting of all spaces $X$ such that a subset $A$ of $X$ is closed if and only if $A \cap K$ is closed in $K$ for all subspaces $K$ of $X$ which are countably ...
7 votes
2 answers
255 views

The union of all coreflective Cartesian closed subcategories of $\mathbf{Top}$

Very often, in topology, one restricts to a coreflective Cartesian closed subcategory of $\mathbf{Top}$ in order to freely use exponential laws for mapping spaces, which imply things like "the ...
29 votes
1 answer
2k views

Is there a topological space X homeomorphic to the space of continuous functions from X to [0, 1]?

In general, we might ask when we can find interesting spaces $X, Y$ such that $X$ is homeomorphic to $[X, Y]$. By the Lawvere fixed point theorem $Y$ must have the fixed point property. Happily, $Y = [...
3 votes
1 answer
222 views

Is the category of convergence spaces cartesian-closed?

Convergence spaces are a generalization of topological spaces; we denote the category of convergence spaces with continuous maps with ${\bf Conv}$. Is ${\bf Conv}$ cartesian-closed?
8 votes
2 answers
418 views

Is the category of quotient of countably based topological spaces cartesian closed ?

In "Handbook of categorical algebra Vol 2" from Francis Borceux, the author gives a proof that $Top$ is not cartesian closed. It seems to me that this proof can be adapted to show that the category $\...