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by thaumasiotes
1652 days ago
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Under your interpretation, poetically's claim still does not reflect the claim from the false proof, and it is still itself obviously wrong. (I'll assume that when you say "f(A) = {c} for some c in X", you mean "f(A) = {c} for some c in Y", since the values of f come from Y.) So consider these definitions: f(x) = x²
A = [0,1]
B = [-1, 1]
We can easily see that f(A) = f(B) = f(A ⋂ B) = A. But it is not true that f takes a constant value over any of those domains. (It is true that f(A ⋃ B) = f(A), but this is required by the premise f(A) = f(B).) |
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It feels to me like you are taking advantage of imprecise language to demonstrate counter-examples to statements that no one was trying to prove.
Do you actually think that 'poetically (or I) are trying to use obviously false properties of functions (specifically the properties you keep providing counter-examples to) or are just being nit-picky about language?
Usually I find much mathematical writing can be hard to read because much of the context or scope of variables, assumptions, or definitions is so implicit. But when something seems obviously wrong it is an exercise to figure out what constraint I’ve missed that makes it true.
When one first learns analysis, the statement of so many of the theorems begins “given a continuous function f” and this continues in formal writing but when people communicate more casually they usually just say function and everyone knows/figures that a continuous function is meant instead of pointing out an obvious counter-example.
In the context of this thread, it is obvious to me that the thing being talked about is when the image of a function restricted to some subset of the domain is a singleton. The reasons it is obvious to me are:
- The f(A) := {f(a) | a in A} notation is standard and implied by the choice of letters
- It is meaningless to say that the value of a function is constant—you always get the same result, so for the word to mean something, I think it is reasonable to take it as implying the restriction is a constant function, or in other words that f(A) = {c}, a singleton.
- It seemed obvious to me from the context of the article
- It seems a reasonable interpretation that changes the statements from nonsense into a reasonable description
At first I thought you just weren’t familiar with the notation, but now it seems you knew it so was it just not obvious to you that that is what was meant? Or do you actually think people were trying to prove or rely on the statements you disproved? Or that people should write more precisely and deserve to be punished with pedantry when they assume some mathematical maturity instead? I’m genuinely curious what you think is going on here because I’m struggling to fit these comments to a model of how hn commenters think and act.