Proving the Existence of a Greatest Element in a Set

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the conditions necessary to assert the existence of a greatest element in a set under a specified ordering scheme. Participants explore concepts related to well-ordering, unique identifiers, and the least-upper-bound property, with a focus on theoretical implications and formal assertions in mathematical proofs.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions what is needed to assert the existence of a greatest element in a set of unique identifiers under some ordering scheme.
  • Another suggests that a unique element x should exist such that x R y for all y in the set, and no z other than x satisfies z R x, where R is the ordering relation.
  • A participant expresses a desire to avoid proving properties of identifiers and instead seeks a more formal way to assume that any subset of U has a greatest element.
  • There is a mention that the concept of well-ordering might be relevant, although uncertainty remains about its exact definition and implications.
  • One participant recalls a definition of a well-ordered set, noting that it states every nonempty subset has a least element, but questions the existence of a corresponding theorem for greatest elements.
  • A later reply discusses the possibility of flipping definitions between least and greatest elements under arbitrary ordering.
  • Another participant proposes using the least-upper-bound property for non-empty subsets, questioning its applicability.
  • Two participants outline drawbacks to the least-upper-bound property, including the need for proof and the requirement that subsets must be bounded for the property to hold.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the definitions and implications of well-ordering and the least-upper-bound property. No consensus is reached on the preferred method for asserting the existence of a greatest element.

Contextual Notes

Participants note limitations regarding the need for proof of properties and the conditions under which the least-upper-bound property applies. The discussion reflects a range of assumptions and definitions that remain unresolved.

gnome
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If I'm writing a proof that depends upon the assumption that a set of unique identifiers (integers, names, etc) must have a "greatest" element under some ordering scheme, what do I need in order to be entitled to make that assertion?
 
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Of course I am no mathematician but it seems you would want to show there is a unique element x such that x R y for all y in the set and also that there is no z other than x so that z R x, where R is your ordering relation.
 
That's more work than I want to do. I don't want to prove anything about the identifiers. I just want to say something like "it is assumed that the elements of U are unique and there is an ordering scheme such that any subset of U has a greatest element" so that I can use that in a proof of something about some algorithm.

But is there a more formal or "preferred" way to make that assertion?
 
If you want to say any subset of U has a greatest element, I think that's called being well-ordered. But I'm not sure on that; well-ordering might also have some other condition.
 
Thanks, that's more or less what I wrote:
"there is an underlying assumption that each process has a unique identifier (UID) taken from some totally ordered set of identifiers so there is one process with a "greatest" UID."

I do remember reading a definition of a well-ordered set saying that it's a set S, such that every nonempty subset of S has a least element. Nothing explicitly about a greatest element, but it's so obvious that there must be a theorem to that effect.

So hopefully one of the mathematicians will tell me the "scholarly" way to say that.
 
I looked it up in mathworld, there's a lot to well-ordering.

http://mathworld.wolfram.com/WellOrderedSet.html

Not sure exactly the term you're looking for, then. I think, however, that once you say you have a "least element," you can just flip your definitions around and call the same thing a "greatest element," so long as you are ordering the set arbitrarily.
 
Thanks. I should've thought to look there. Based on that I think I can just require that my set of UIDs is well-ordered and therefore has a distinct greatest element. I don't have to prove that any particular set is well-ordered, just that my algorithm will use some arbitrary well-ordered set of unique identifiers. And I think it's obvious enough that since by definition every subset of a well-ordered set has a least element, it also has a greatest element (just keep taking away the least element until there's only 1 left).
 
Why won't the least-upper-bound property work? Just say your sets are all non-empty subsets of a set that has the least-upper-bound property, and they contain their supremum. Wouldn't that work?
 
well there are two drawbacks to what you suggest:

1) you would have to prove, not just say, that it is true for your set.

2) the least upper bound propery, even when it is true, does not say what he wants, as a subset, in order to have a lub must be itself bounded, and then the lub may not lie in the subset.
 
  • #10
mathwonk said:
well there are two drawbacks to what you suggest:

1) you would have to prove, not just say, that it is true for your set.

2) the least upper bound propery, even when it is true, does not say what he wants, as a subset, in order to have a lub must be itself bounded, and then the lub may not lie in the subset.
Ooh, right. Thanks.
 

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