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Wednesday, February 25, 2026

The Naturality of the Power Map: A Yoneda Perspective(自成天然之趣,不烦人事之工。)

When I first began my study of mathematics, I felt dissatisfied with the definition n0=1 in Tao's Analysis, which seemed like a mere convention. Why should there be such arbitrary prescriptions in mathematics?

Later, I realized that one could categorify N via the category of finite sets, where the story simply boils down to the empty set acting as the initial object. Eventually, I came to understand that many familiar operations are actually intrinsic structures naturally carried by certain algebraic categories. For instance, exponentiation arises canonically from Mon, just as polynomial operations arise naturally from Ring.

Let us consider the category of monoids, denoted by Mon.

The forgetful functor is represented by N.

Remark. For any Lawvere Theory , the forgetful functor is represented by F(1), where F is the free functor.

The Yoneda lemma tells us that

NHomMon(N,N)Nat(hN,hN)

img

The Yoneda lemma implies that each n defines a natural transformation. It is not hard to see that this natural transformation is simply the power map ()n, and the natural transformation defined by 0 sends everything to the identity element e.

Also, Yoneda Lemma tells us that (xm)n=xmn directly.

Let us consider m,nN. Then we have mn=mn. (For example, 67=42) Hence, after Yoneda embedding, we have

()n()m=()mn.

Similarly, in the category of rings (specifically commutative rings), denoted by Ring, we replace N with the polynomial ring Z[x].

Here, the forgetful functor is represented by Z[x].

By the Yoneda lemma, we have:

Z[x]HomRing(Z[x],Z[x])Nat(hZ[x],hZ[x])

The natural transformation defined by a polynomial f(x)Z[x] is precisely the evaluation map. For any element r in a ring, the transformation is simply:

rf(r)

Just as exponentiation is the canonical operation in monoids, polynomial evaluation is the canonical operation in rings.

Similarly, 0Z[x] gives us r0.

 

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