I am reading Awodey's book of category theory and I have some confusion regarding the definitions. Maybe these are very basic questions but I feel I am missing something. This question has helped me, especially Qiaochu Yuan's answer, and probably during this question I will answer myself but I won't notice... So, if any of you can help me, I would appreciate that.
My first doubt comes from the $1_{A}$ morphism. I have the mental image of the identity function and it messes my head up. The only thing we know is that there exists such morphism $1_{A}: A\longrightarrow A$ (it doesn't have to be the only morphism in $Hom(A,A)$) and that it holds the "Unity" property, i.e. $f\circ 1_{A} = f$, for any $f$ such that $Dom(f) = A$, or $1_{A}\circ g = g$ if $Cod(g)=A$. But I have two questions:
- What meaning does the equality have here? Or should I think of the category as I think of a formal language and the interpretation should come later? It is confusing to me the fact that sometimes when we talk of functions equality means that $f(a) = g(a)\;\forall a \in A$, but in other situations we can't say that and I can't grasp it.
- The unity is unique, isn't it? My thought is that if $1_{A}$ and $1_{A}'$ are such morphisms, then $1_{A}'=1_{A}\circ 1_{A}'=1_{A}$ depending on where you "start" (sorry for the ambiguity, but I think the idea is clear).
The second doubt has the same questions but regarding the composition $f\circ g$. So, what I am saying is that there is a mapping between morphisms $Hom(A,B)$ and $Hom(B,C)$ into $Hom(A,C)$. Again, is $f\circ g$ unique, only because of the associativity property? And again, should I understand it as purely formal definition and give it an interpretation when I think of a particular category?
I am sorry if the questions are stupid or don't make sense, but as I said, I have the feeling that I don't understand something. Thank you.