2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.entcs.2018.11.013
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Iterated Covariant Powerset is not a Monad

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Cited by 31 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…The negative result for P • P ⇒ P • P was already shown by [12], and can also be recovered from both Theorems 3.6 and 4.20. The other negative results follow from either Theorem 4.15 or Theorem 4.20.…”
Section: The Boom Hierarchy: a Case Study For Distributive Lawssupporting
confidence: 66%
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“…The negative result for P • P ⇒ P • P was already shown by [12], and can also be recovered from both Theorems 3.6 and 4.20. The other negative results follow from either Theorem 4.15 or Theorem 4.20.…”
Section: The Boom Hierarchy: a Case Study For Distributive Lawssupporting
confidence: 66%
“…In order to do this, we isolate sufficient conditions on algebraic theories inducing two monads, such that there can be no distributive law between them. Earlier generalizations of this counterexample have appeared in [12,14]. All the existing approaches involve direct calculations with the distributive law axioms, leading to somewhat opaque conditions.…”
Section: General Plotkin Theoremsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Nevertheless, distributive laws of a functor that does not preserve weak pullbacks over the powerset are rare and the answer might depend on the kind of axioms we impose over such distributive law. For instance, it is shown in [6] that there is no distributive law of (P, η) over (P, η), correcting a mistake that appeared a couple of times in the literature claiming the opposite [6,Section 5], but, on the other hand, distributive laws of (P, η, μ) over P and distributive laws of P over (P, η, μ) do exist (just take P η • μ and ηP • μ, respectively).…”
Section: Final Remarksmentioning
confidence: 99%