module 1Lab.HLevel.Universe whereUniverses of n-types🔗
A common phenomenon in higher category theory is that the collection of all -categories in a given universe assembles into an -category in the successor universe :
- The collection of all sets (0-categories) is a (1-)-category;
- The collection of all (1-)categories is a 2-category;
- The collection of all 2-categories is a 3-category;
Because of the univalence axiom, the same phenomenon can be observed in homotopy type theory: The subuniverse of consisting of all -types is a -type in . That means: the universe of propositions is a set, the universe of sets is a groupoid, the universe of groupoids is a bigroupoid, and so on.
h-Levels of equivalences🔗
As warmup, we prove that if and are -types, then so is the type of equivalences . For the case where is a successor, this only depends on the h-level of .
≃-is-hlevel : (n : Nat) → is-hlevel A n → is-hlevel B n → is-hlevel (A ≃ B) n
≃-is-hlevel {A = A} {B = B} zero Ahl Bhl = contr (f , f-eqv) deform where
  f : A → B
  f _ = Bhl .centre
  f-eqv : is-equiv f
  f-eqv = is-contr→is-equiv Ahl BhlFor the zero case, we’re asked
to give a proof of contractibility of A ≃ B. As
the centre we pick the canonical function sending
to the centre of contraction of
,
which is an equivalence because it is a map between contractible types.
By the characterisation of paths in Σ
and the fact that being an equivalence is a proposition,
we get the required family of paths deforming any
to our f.
  deform : (g : A ≃ B) → (f , f-eqv) ≡ g
  deform (g , g-eqv) = Σ-path (λ i x → Bhl .paths (g x) i)
                              (is-equiv-is-prop _ _ _)As mentioned before, the case for successors does not depend on the proof that has the given h-level. This is because, for , has the same h-level as , which is the same as .
≃-is-hlevel (suc n) _ Bhl =
  Σ-is-hlevel (suc n)
    (fun-is-hlevel (suc n) Bhl)
    λ f → is-prop→is-hlevel-suc (is-equiv-is-prop f)h-Levels of paths🔗
Univalence states that the type is equivalent to . Since the latter is of h-level when and are -types, then so is the former:
≡-is-hlevel : (n : Nat) → is-hlevel A n → is-hlevel B n → is-hlevel (A ≡ B) n
≡-is-hlevel n Ahl Bhl = equiv→is-hlevel n ua univalence⁻¹ (≃-is-hlevel n Ahl Bhl)Universes🔗
We refer to the dependent sum of the family is-hlevel - n as
n-Type:
record n-Type ℓ n : Type (lsuc ℓ) where
  no-eta-equality
  constructor el
  field
    ∣_∣   : Type ℓ
    is-tr : is-hlevel ∣_∣ n
  infix 100 ∣_∣
  instance
    H-Level-n-type : ∀ {k} → H-Level ∣_∣ (n + k)
    H-Level-n-type = basic-instance n is-tr
open n-Type using (∣_∣ ; is-tr ; H-Level-n-type) publicLike mentioned in the introduction, the main theorem of this section
is that n-Type is a type of h-level
.
We take a detour first and establish a characterisation of paths for
n-Type: Since is-tr is a proposition, paths in n-Type are determined by paths of the
underlying types. By univalence, these correspond to
equivalences of the underlying type:
n-path : {n : Nat} {X Y : n-Type ℓ n} → ∣ X ∣ ≡ ∣ Y ∣ → X ≡ Y
n-path f i .∣_∣ = f i
n-path {n = n} {X} {Y} f i .is-tr =
  is-prop→pathp (λ i → is-hlevel-is-prop {A = f i} n) (X .is-tr) (Y .is-tr) i
n-ua : {n : Nat} {X Y : n-Type ℓ n} → ∣ X ∣ ≃ ∣ Y ∣ → X ≡ Y
n-ua f = n-path (ua f)
n-univalence : {n : Nat} {X Y : n-Type ℓ n} → (∣ X ∣ ≃ ∣ Y ∣) ≃ (X ≡ Y)
n-univalence {n = n} {X} {Y} = n-ua , is-iso→is-equiv isic where
  inv : ∀ {Y} → X ≡ Y → ∣ X ∣ ≃ ∣ Y ∣
  inv p = path→equiv (ap ∣_∣ p)
  linv : ∀ {Y} → is-left-inverse (inv {Y}) n-ua
  linv x = Σ-prop-path is-equiv-is-prop (funext λ x → transport-refl _)
  rinv : ∀ {Y} → is-right-inverse (inv {Y}) n-ua
  rinv = J (λ y p → n-ua (inv p) ≡ p) path where
    path : n-ua (inv {X} refl) ≡ refl
    path i j .∣_∣ = ua.ε {A = ∣ X ∣} refl i j
    path i j .is-tr = is-prop→squarep
      (λ i j → is-hlevel-is-prop
        {A = ua.ε {A = ∣ X ∣} refl i j} n)
      (λ j → X .is-tr) (λ j → n-ua {X = X} {Y = X} (path→equiv refl) j .is-tr)
      (λ j → X .is-tr) (λ j → X .is-tr)
      i j
  isic : is-iso n-ua
  isic = iso inv rinv (linv {Y})Since h-levels are closed under equivalence, and we already have an upper bound on the h-level of when is an -type, we know that -Type is a -type:
n-Type-is-hlevel : ∀ n → is-hlevel (n-Type ℓ n) (suc n)
n-Type-is-hlevel zero x y = n-ua
  ((λ _ → y .is-tr .centre) , is-contr→is-equiv (x .is-tr) (y .is-tr))
n-Type-is-hlevel (suc n) x y =
  is-hlevel≃ (suc n) (n-univalence e⁻¹) (≃-is-hlevel (suc n) (x .is-tr) (y .is-tr))For 1-categorical mathematics, the important h-levels are the propositions and the sets, so they get short names:
Set : ∀ ℓ → Type (lsuc ℓ)
Set ℓ = n-Type ℓ 2
Prop : ∀ ℓ → Type (lsuc ℓ)
Prop ℓ = n-Type ℓ 1