Corpus Corpus Monograph Chapter Canonical corpus_monograph_chapter In standard category theory, composition of morphisms is an *axiom*: one postulates that for morphisms f : A → B and g : B → C, the composite g ∘ f : A →…
Corpus · Book I · Chapter 13

Chapter 13: The Program Monoid — Composition as a Theorem

Page 51 in the printed volume

In standard category theory, composition of morphisms is an axiom: one postulates that for morphisms f : A → B and g : B → C, the composite g ∘ f : A → C exists and is associative. In τ, composition is a theorem. We define programs as finite sequences of ρ-instructions, introduce normalization, and prove that composition — defined as concatenation followed by normalization — is associative. The proof passes through the NF-Confluence Lemma: any two reduction paths to normal form yield the same result. The resulting program monoid is the compositional substrate on which the category structure of Part XII will be built.

Save or share this page for inspection

Download a portable dossier, copy a reviewer note, or send this page to someone who can inspect it.

Email to expert