I've often wanted to learn more about convergence spaces, but I've found myself lost in a maze of definitions (sometimes with conflicting names across sources) with no intuition about what each one is good for. I hope I will be forgiven for asking a vague and perhaps overly broad question which is basically “where do I start? and where can I find a map?”.
I've found the following definitions in various places in the literature, which it might be useful to gather here for completeness of MathOverflow and to avoid conflicting terminology in answers:
A convergence0 space (called a “filter space” in the nLab, but a “generalized convergence space” in [Preuß 2009]) is a set $X$ with a relation “$\blacktriangleright$” (“converges”) between the set of [proper] filters on $X$ and $X$, such that:
$\{x\}^\uparrow \blacktriangleright x$ where $\{x\}^\uparrow := \{A \subseteq X : x\in A\}$,
if $\mathcal{F} \blacktriangleright x$ and $\mathcal{G} \supseteq \mathcal{F}$ then $\mathcal{G} \blacktriangleright x$.
A convergence1 space (called a “Kent convergence space” in [Preuß 2009]) is a convergence0 space in which additionally:
- if $\mathcal{F} \blacktriangleright x$ then $(\mathcal{F} \cap \{x\}^\uparrow) \blacktriangleright x$.
A convergence2 space (called a “convergence space” in the nLab, but a “limit space” in [Preuß 2009]) is a convergence0 space in which additionally:
- if $\mathcal{F} \blacktriangleright x$ and $\mathcal{G} \blacktriangleright x$ then $(\mathcal{F} \cap \mathcal{G}) \blacktriangleright x$.
(This is, in particular, a convergence1 space since we always have $\{x\}^\uparrow \blacktriangleright x$.)
A pseudotopological space is a convergence0 space in which additionally:
- if $\mathcal{F}$ is a filter on $X$ such that for all $\mathcal{G} \supseteq \mathcal{F}$ there is $\mathcal{H} \supseteq \mathcal{G}$ such that $\mathcal{H} \blacktriangleright x$, then, in fact, $\mathcal{F} \blacktriangleright x$.
Equivalently: if every ultrafilter $\mathcal{U} \supseteq \mathcal{F}$ converges to $x$, then $\mathcal{F}$ converges to $x$.
When there is $\mathcal{H} \supseteq \mathcal{G}$ such that $\mathcal{H} \blacktriangleright x$ we can say that $x$ is adherent to $\mathcal{G}$: the above condition is equivalent to saying that if $x$ is adherent to every $\mathcal{G} \supseteq \mathcal{F}$ then $\mathcal{F}$ converges to $x$.
A pseudotopological space is a convergence2 space, because if an ultrafilter $\mathcal{U}$ contains the intersection $\mathcal{F} \cap \mathcal{G}$ of two filters then it contains one of the two.
A pretopological space is a convergence0 space in which additionally:
- for each $x$, there exists a smallest $\mathcal{F}$, called the vicinity filter of $x$, such that $\mathcal{F} \blacktriangleright x$.
When there is $\mathcal{H} \ni A$ such that $\mathcal{H} \blacktriangleright x$ we can say that $x$ is adherent to $A$: so the above condition says that if $x$ is adherent to every $A$ compatible with $\mathcal{F}$ (meaning that its complement is not in $\mathcal{F}$) then $\mathcal{F}$ converges to $x$.
Clearly, every pretopological space is pseudotopological. Also, we consider a topological space as a pretopological space by letting $\mathcal{F} \blacktriangleright x$ when $\mathcal{F} \supseteq \mathcal{V}_x$ with $\mathcal{V}_x$ the neighborhood filter of $x$ (i.e., we defined the vicinity filter of $x$ to be the neighborhood filter of $x$).
A convergence0 space is called Hausdorff when each ultrafilter converges to at most one point, and compact when each ultrafilter converges to at least one point. (For topological spaces, these are the usual notions.)
From what I understand, none of the implications “topological space ⇒ pretopological space ⇒ pseudotopological space ⇒ convergence2 space ⇒ convergence1 space ⇒ convergence0 space” can be reversed (examples 16, 39 and 31 of Dolecki's “An Initiation into Convergence Theory” cited below provide at least some of these counterexamples). Also, each of these implications $\mathbf{P} \Rightarrow \mathbf{Q}$ actually means that the category $\mathbf{P}$ is a reflective subcategory of that of $\mathbf{Q}$ (a proof of this can be found in: [Preuß 2009], propositions 2.5.1 through 2.5.5).
Questions:
What intuition(s) should we keep in mind for the above definitions? For example, something like “a pretopological space is a bit like a topological space but where the adherence operation is no longer idempotent” is helpful (to some extent).
How important and how well-behaved are they? (For example, I understand that pseudotopological spaces are categorically better behaved because they are Cartesian closed (even a “quasitopos”). It is also relevant that some/all of the above notions have better-behaved quotients than topological spaces.)
Where do these various kinds of spaces arise naturally (if ever)? Where are they useful? (I suspect convergence(0/1/2) spaces are of a different flavor than pseudotopological spaces, and I imagine that the non-standardness of the definitions hints at some deficiency, but I don't know how more.)
What are some important (counter)examples that one should know? (Like, what would one put in a Steen&Seebach-style book for pseudotopological spaces or convergence spaces?)
In the spirit of the “how mathematics might have been different” question: could topology have plausibly been defined with the notion of pseudotopological space as the main/standard notion? If not, why? For example, what main theorems of general topology fail spectacularly for pseudotopological spaces? If I were to try to replace “topological space” by “pseudotopological space” throughout mathematics, what are the main sources of annoyances that I would encounter?
(Again, I realize that what I'm asking is very broad, but I'm trying to get the big picture here. For specific facts about convergence spaces, I'm already aware at least of the following references. So consider the above questions as mere guidelines to the sort of things that might be interesting to say.)
Some references:
Bentley, Herrlich & Lowen, “Improving Constructions in Topology”, p. 3–20 in: Herrlich & Porst (eds.) Category Theory at Work (Bremen 1990), Heldermann (1991)
Herrlich, Lowen-Colebunders & Schwarz, “Improving $\mathbf{Top}$: $\mathbf{PrTop}$ and $\mathbf{PsTop}$”, p. 21–34 in: Herrlich & Porst (eds.), op. cit.
Szymon Dolecki, “An Initiation into Convergence Theory”, p. 115–161 in: Frédéric Mynard & Elliott Pearl (eds.), Beyond Topology, AMS Contemporary Mathematics 486 (2009)
Szymon Dolecki, “Acquiring a dimension: from topology to convergence theory”
Michael Shulman, “Pseudotopological Spaces and the Stone-Čech Compactification” online notes
[Preuß 2009] := Gerhard Preuß, “Semiuniform Convergence Spaces and Filter Spaces”, p. 333–373 in: Mynard & Pearl (eds.), op. cit.