Axiomatic Cohesion proposes that the contrast between cohesion and
non-cohesion may be expressed by means of a geometric morphism p:E→S (between toposes) with certain special properties that allow
to effectively use the intuition that the objects of E are `spaces'
and those of S are `sets'. Such geometric morphisms are called
(pre-)cohesive. We may also say that E is pre-cohesive (over
S). In this case, the topos E determines an
S-enriched `homotopy' category. The purpose of the present paper is
to study certain aspects of this homotopy theory. We introduce weakly Kan
objects in a pre-cohesive topos, which are analogous to Kan complexes in the
topos of simplicial sets. Also, given a geometric morphism g:F→E between pre-cohesive toposes F and E
(over the same base), we define what it means for g to preserve pieces. We
prove that if g preserves pieces then it induces an adjunction between the
homotopy categories determined by F and E, and that the
direct image g∗:F→E preserves weakly Kan objects.
These and other results support the intuition that the inverse image of g is
`geometric realization'. In particular, since Kan complexes are weakly Kan in
the pre-cohesive topos of simplicial sets, the result relating g and weakly
Kan objects is analogous to the fact that the singular complex of a space is a
Kan complex.Comment: 34 page