topos
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek τόπος (tópos, “place”). Compare topic.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈtɒpɒs/
Noun
topos (plural topoi or toposes)
- A literary theme or motif; a rhetorical convention or formula.
- 2003, Roy Porter, Flesh in the Age of Reason, Penguin (2004), page 239,
- The ritual of weighing the soul was an iconographic topos familiar to Christianity from the ceremony of the weighing of sins at the Last Judgement.
- 2003, Roy Porter, Flesh in the Age of Reason, Penguin (2004), page 239,
- (category theory) A Cartesian closed category which has a subobject classifier.
- 2011 June 27, Tom Leinster, “An informal introduction to topos theory”, in arXiv.org, Cornell University Library, retrieved 2018-03-30:
- Now in a topos, you can interpret a really vast range of theories: any ‘higher-order theory’, in fact. (First order means that you can only quantify over elements of a set; in a second order theory you can also quantify over subsets of a set; and so on.) Models of any such theory get along well with logical morphisms, because logical morphisms preserve everything. So you can tell a similar story for toposes, logical morphisms and higher order theories as for finite product categories, finite-product-preserving functors and algebraic theories.
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Translations
literary theme
Dutch
Etymology
From Ancient Greek τόπος (tópos, “place”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈtoː.pɔs/
Audio (file)
Noun
Italian
Etymology
From Ancient Greek τόπος (tópos, “place”).
Portuguese
Spanish
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