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by gowld
557 days ago
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I think a better word is "motivation" -- why we chose this option at this juncture instead of many other options. Yes, it's a "reason", but "reason" already means something else. The "Reason" as result is true is that it follows from the previously established axioms via logical reasoning. |
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Theorem: Every subspace Y of a second-countable topological space X is second-countable.
Reason: Intersecting each set in a basis for X with Y yields a basis for Y.
Proof: [formal symbolic stuff involving open sets and unions, and mentioning cardinality, etc.]
(I’m not claiming ‘reason’ is the best word for this — it probably isn’t. But it’s not the same thing as motivation.)
> The "Reason" as result is true is that it follows from the previously established axioms via logical reasoning.
One could argue this is not the reason a result is true; it’s the reason we know it’s true. The fact that true statements follow from established truths by logical reasoning is more a property of the formal system (which hopefully is sound and consistent) than it is to do with the notion of truth itself.