Let be a vector space over and . We naturally have an inclusion map . By the universal property of free vector space, we have the following diagram.
Let us define to be the span map.
It is natural since is linearly independent iff is injective, spans iff is surjective, and is a basis iff is an isomorphism.
Lots of people are confused about why we only allowed finite linear combination even when is an infinite set.
The reason is simple, , which is direct sum, not product. And it is the domain of .
Ok, so what is the connection between the new definition and the old? Well the old one is simply . I would like to say that it is a ridiculous definition, the only thing it did was make people feel confused.
The story is the same for the group as well. Let and be the free group generated by , then by the universal property of free group, we have the following diagram commute:
Where .
Again, generates iff is surjective.
A really good question is do we have an analogy to linearly independent in ?
The answer will not be quite the same. Since every vector space is free but not every group is. But we could capture this idea via !
Recall that is linearly independent iff is injective, so the proper analogy is is injective, i.e. or is a free group.
Indeed, the gives us a way to measure how efficient the generator set we use. Since the kernel represents what we lose. So if , then is a more efficient generator set than . Here the notation means subobject.
i.e. iff there exists a monomorphism in .
The reason that we do not use is for .
Now let us back to category of vector space over .
Easy to see that
Hence we only need to use the card of the generator set to measure it is efficient or not in Category of vector space. But things are different in category of group.