image
Physics Forums Logo
image
image
* Register * Upgrade Blogs Library Staff Rules Mark Forums Read
image
image   image
image

Go Back   Physics Forums > Mathematics > General Math


Reply

image How to prove an axiom ? Share It Thread Tools Search this Thread image
Old Jul17-03, 03:34 PM                  #1
josdavi

josdavi is Offline:
Posts: 9
How to prove an axiom ?

I know that a theorem can be deduced from the AXIOMS of a formal system,
but I do not know how to prove an axiom.
Would you please teach me ?

How to prove an axiom ?
How did the axiomatic rules become axiom ?

I think some statements or formulas are axiomatic, although they seem unbelievable, for example,

http://www.physicsforums.com/showthr...&threadid=3876
(Volumes of Regular Icosahedron and Regular Tetrahedron ¡V
in the Mathematics forum of Physics Forums.)
  Reply With Quote
Old Jul17-03, 03:37 PM                  #2
chroot

PF Admin
 
chroot's Avatar

chroot is Offline:
Posts: 10,248
Axioms cannot be proved, by definition. They are "self-evident truths," the starting points of a model.

- Warren
  Reply With Quote
Old Jul17-03, 03:47 PM                  #3
HallsofIvy

PF Mentor

HallsofIvy is Offline:
Posts: 24,772
As chroot says, you can't prove an axiom, however, I have a distaste for the phrase "self evident truths"- I don't believe there are such things. "Axioms" are accepted as part of the definition of the particular system we are working in.

In Euclidean geometry, "If a two lines are parallel, then a transversal cutting both has interior angles adding to one straight angle" is an axiom.

In hyperbolic geometry, "If two lines are paralle, then a transversal cutting both has interior angles adding to less than one straight angle" is an axiom.

Which of those is a "self evident truth"?
  Reply With Quote
Old Jul17-03, 07:28 PM                  #4
mathman
 
mathman's Avatar

mathman is Offline:
Posts: 2,439
Recognitions:
Science Advisor Science Advisor
pedantry

From what I remember of high school geometry, there was a distinction made between axioms and postulates. Axioms are "self-evident truths". Postulates are assumptions made for the model. The "parallel" statements are considered postulates for Euclidean or non-Euclidean geometry, as the case may be.

My high school days were a long time ago. I don't know how things are done these days.
  Reply With Quote
Old Jul17-03, 07:40 PM                  #5
selfAdjoint

selfAdjoint is Offline:
Posts: 7,996
Recognitions:
PF Contributor PF Contributor
Retired Staff Retired Staff
Nowadays I don't think mathematicians make that distinction. Mostly they too, are uncomfortable with the idea of "self evident truths" and don't think that describes what they define as sets of axioms.

Most axiom systems now are sets of minimal spanning properties that define whatever dingus you're thinking of. Like the axioms for a metric or a topology. The point is that every true dingus will have those properties, and anything that has those properties will be a dingus.
  Reply With Quote
Old Jul17-03, 08:01 PM                  #6
chroot

PF Admin
 
chroot's Avatar

chroot is Offline:
Posts: 10,248
Okay, okay, I'm sorry for using the phrase "self-evident truth." I just wasn't sure how best to describe 'axiom,' and so consulted Webster, who felt that phrase appropriate. You're all correct though -- there is no such thing as objective truth. You can assemble any axioms you'd like into a system, and carry that system through to its logical conclusions, yet there are any infinite number of different systems with different conclusions. None of them can be said to be "right."

The example of Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry is precient.

- Warren
  Reply With Quote
Old Jul17-03, 08:41 PM                  #7
jeff

jeff is Offline:
Posts: 660
Recognitions:
Science Advisor Science Advisor
Originally posted by chroot
Axioms cannot be proved, by definition.
Axioms may be decidable as propositions of some larger enveloping system.
  Reply With Quote
Old Jul18-03, 02:51 AM                  #8
STAii
 
STAii's Avatar

STAii is Offline:
Posts: 353
There is something annoying about some axioms.
For example, take the following two statments (both in Euclidean geometry):
1-"Adding up the angles of a triangle makes 180 degrees"
2-"If a two lines are parallel, then a transversal cutting both has interior angles adding to one straight angle"

Now, you can proove each of these two using the other, but, which one do we consider an axiom, and why it (and not the other one) ?
  Reply With Quote
Old Jul18-03, 09:55 AM                  #9
HallsofIvy

PF Mentor

HallsofIvy is Offline:
Posts: 24,772
There are many examples of "equivalent" axioms (one geometry text I recently read listed 12 different propositions that had been used, by different authors, in place of the parallel postulate). You can use any one of equivalent statements as an axiom and prove the rest- the choice may be whichever you think is simpler or just more convenient.

Here are 7 equivalent "axioms" that distinguish the real numbers from the rational numbers:

Every Cauchy sequence converges.

If a set of real numbers has an upper bound then it has a least upper bound.

If a set of real numbers has a lower bound then it has a greatest lower bound.

If an increasing sequence of real numbers has an upper bound then it converges

If a decreasing sequence of real numbers has a lower bound then it converges.

The set of all real numbers, with the usual topology, is connected.

Any subset of the real numbers that is both closed and bounded (in the usual topology) is compact.

Given any one of these, one can prove the others.
  Reply With Quote
Old Jul18-03, 12:18 PM                  #10
HallsofIvy

PF Mentor

HallsofIvy is Offline:
Posts: 24,772
I might also point out that while any one of these can be taken as an axiom for the real numbers, one can "go back" a level and define the real numbers in terms of rational numbers so that these becomes theorems.

For example, if you define the real numbers in terms of Dedekind Cuts, then the "least upper bound" property becomes easy to prove. If you define real numbers as "equivalence classes of Cauchy sequences" then the Cauchy Criterion is easy to prove.

What is an axiom and what is a theorem depends upon what "level" you want to work at and sometimes an arbitrary choice among equivalents.
  Reply With Quote
image image
Reply
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: How to prove an axiom ?
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Axiom A=B Philosophy 4 Jan24-07 12:12 AM
Dedekind's Axiom Canute Number Theory 53 Aug27-05 09:26 AM
Completeness Axiom cepheid General Math 12 Jan2-05 03:15 PM
The zero axiom hey.like General Physics 1 Dec10-04 05:15 AM
DNA - the central axiom? mhernan Biology 19 Mar26-04 03:16 PM

Powered by vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. © 2009 Physics Forums
Sciam | physorgPhysorg.com Science News Partner
image
image   image