In category theory, a global element of an object A from a category is a morphism
h\colon1\toA,
In an elementary topos the global elements of the subobject classifier form a Heyting algebra when ordered by inclusion of the corresponding subobjects of the terminal object.[3] For example, Grph happens to be a topos, whose subobject classifier is a two-vertex directed clique with an additional self-loop (so five edges, three of which are self-loops and hence the global elements of). The internal logic of Grph is therefore based on the three-element Heyting algebra as its truth values.
A well-pointed category is a category that has enough global elements to distinguish every two morphisms. That is, for each pair of distinct arrows in the category, there should exist a global element whose compositions with them are different from each other.[1]