Using Grothendieck universes as the foundations of (higher) category theory is problematic:
- The existence of Grothendieck universes relies on the existence of inaccessible cardinals. However, one can not prove that the existence of inaccessible cardinals is independent from ZFC: see e.g. this question on SE.
- So whenever one proves a claim which is formulated in ZFC, but where the proof uses (higher) category theory, it is absolutely valid to question whether or not the existence of inaccessible cardinals is fundamentally needed, or just a gadget to justify category theoretic arguments. This happened e.g. with Wiles' proof of Fermat's last theorem, see this post on MO.
Intuitively and naively one wants to be able to form e.g. the category of all small categories without having to worry about any of this. Essentially, I am looking for some axiomatic class theory that allows one to do higher category theory, but which is a conservative extension of ZFC (i.e. every claim that can be formulated in ZFC and that can be proven using this hypothetical theory of classes can also be proven in ZFC).
So my first question is:
- Is there an axiomatic set/class theory that allows one to work with higher categories (in particular, stacks) seamlessly, but which is a conservative extension of ZFC? (I believe the answer is 'no', since otherwise people would use this theory instead of Grothendieck universes - but maybe such a theory is just not well-known to the mainstream algebraists)
- Is question 1 completely hopeless? I.e. is there a fundamental reason why working with higher categories necessitates the assumption of the existence of inaccessible cardinals?
My completely naive proposal to question 1 is the following: based on how one forms 2-categories from 1-categories, one could consider a typed axiom system as follows:
- For every ZFC-ordinal $\mu$, we have $\mu$-sets. ZFC sets are '0-sets'.
- The collection of all $\mu$-sets forms a $\mu+1$-set. Moreover, the collection $$\{S \; : \; S \text{ is a }\nu \text{-set for some } \nu < \mu\}$$ forms a $\mu$-set.
- $\mu$-sets satisfy ZFC-type axioms, with the restriction that one can only take a $\mu$-set sized union of $\mu$-sets to obtain a $\mu$-set, and only a $0$-set (ZFC-set) sized formula in the axiom schema of specification.
My questions about this construction:
- People must have worked with such axioms before. Could you provide some references?
- Inspired by the proof of the fact that the Von Neumann-Bernays-Gödel (NBG) set/class theory is a conservative extension of ZFC: could such a theory be a conservative extension of ZFC?