AbstractWe consider Segal's categorical approach to conformal field theory (CFT). Segal constructed a category whose objects are finite families of circles, and whose morphisms are Riemann surfaces with boundary compatible with the families of circles in the domain and codomain. A CFT is then defined to be a functor to the category of Hilbert spaces, preserving the appropriate structure. In particular, morphisms in the geometric category must be sent to trace class maps.However, Segal's approach is not quite categorical, as the geometric structure he considers has an associative composition, but lacks identities. We begin by demonstrating that an appropriate method of dealing with the lack of identities in this situation is the notion of nu...