`What is a Thing?': Topos Theory in the Foundations of Physics
Abstract
The goal of this paper is to summarise the first steps in developing a fundamentally new way of constructing theories of physics. The motivation comes from a desire to address certain deep issues that arise when contemplating quantum theories of space and time. In doing so we provide a new answer to Heidegger's timeless question ``What is a thing?''. Our basic contention is that constructing a theory of physics is equivalent to finding a representation in a topos of a certain formal language that is attached to the system. Classical physics uses the topos of sets. Other theories involve a different topos. For the types of theory discussed in this paper, a key goal is to represent any physical quantity with an arrow where and are two special objects (the `state-object' and `quantity-value object') in the appropriate topos, . We discuss two different types of language that can be attached to a system, . The first, , is a propositional language; the second, , is a higher-order, typed language. Both languages provide deductive systems with an intuitionistic logic. With the aid of we expand and develop some of the earlier work (By CJI and collaborators.) on topos theory and quantum physics. A key step is a process we term `daseinisation' by which a projection operator is mapped to a sub-object of the spectral presheaf --the topos quantum analogue of a classical state space. The topos concerned is : the category of contravariant set-valued functors on the category (partially ordered set) of commutative sub-algebras of the algebra of bounded operators on the quantum Hilbert space .
Cite
@article{arxiv.0803.0417,
title = {`What is a Thing?': Topos Theory in the Foundations of Physics},
author = {Andreas Doering and Chris Isham},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0803.0417},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
To appear in ``New Structures in Physics'' ed R. Coecke