Defining Neighborhoods in Topology: Inclusion vs. Containment

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the definitions of neighborhoods in topology, specifically contrasting the definition based on inclusion of an open set with the definition that describes a neighborhood as an open set containing a point. Participants explore the implications of each definition and their relevance to separation axioms and theorem formulation.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants prefer the definition that describes a neighborhood as an open set containing a point, citing its convenience for formulating separation axioms.
  • Others argue that the inclusion of an open set in the definition allows for more flexibility, enabling the use of closed sets as neighborhoods.
  • There is a concern raised about the potential for a point to be on the boundary of a neighborhood if the definition relies solely on inclusion without specifying the point's position within an open set.
  • Some participants suggest that the differences between the definitions are cosmetic and that their equivalence can be easily proven.
  • A few participants express skepticism about the necessity of including the open set condition, viewing it as an unnecessary complication.
  • One participant mentions that normality, a separation axiom, is relevant to the discussion, although there is some confusion about its precise definition and implications.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally do not reach a consensus on which definition is preferable, with multiple competing views remaining on the implications and utility of each definition.

Contextual Notes

Some participants note that the definitions may depend on specific contexts or assumptions, and there is uncertainty regarding the implications of allowing neighborhoods to be defined without being open.

mr.tea
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Hi,t
I am studying topology at the moment. I have seen that some authors define the neighborhood of a point using inclusion of an open set, while others define the term as open set that contains the point.
In most of the theory I have seen so far, the latter is more convenient to use. Why is there a distinction between the definitions, and what are the advantages of the definition using the inclusion of an open set?

Thank you.
 
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I prefer the second definition you mention, because you can formulate the separation axioms in terms of neighborhoods then.

For example, a space is regular if and only if it contains a neighborhood basis of closed sets.

However, I have to admit, that for many purposes, we can work with open neighborhoods, as these form a neighborhood basis for the neighborhoods anyways.
 
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Math_QED said:
I prefer the second definition you mention, because you can formulate the separation axioms in terms of neighborhoods then.

For example, a space is regular if and only if it contains a neighborhood basis of closed sets.

However, I have to admit, that for many purposes, we can work with open neighborhoods, as these form a neighborhood basis for the neighborhoods anyways.
Thank you for the answer. So why do authors define it using inclusion of open set?
 
mr.tea said:
Thank you for the answer. So why do authors define it using inclusion of open set?

Personal preference, I suppose.
 
Can you explain more about the first definition? Do they say that the point is inside the open set that is included? If not, I would think that the point could be on the boundary of a "neighborhood", which would be a problem. If they do specify that the point is inside an open set contained in the neighborhood, then that allows one to call a closed set (or neither open nor closed) a "neighborhood". I think that could be more convenient some times.
 
FactChecker said:
Can you explain more about the first definition? Do they say that the point is inside the open set that is included? If not, I would think that the point could be on the boundary of a "neighborhood", which would be a problem. If they do specify that the point is inside an open set contained in the neighborhood, then that allows one to call a closed set (or neither open nor closed) a "neighborhood". I think that could be more convenient some times.
Yes. A set ##S## is a neighborhood of a point ##s\in X## if there is an open set ##U## containing ##s## and is contained in ##S## (##s\in U\subset S##).
Being an open set is independent of being closed. A lot of the theorems are either want a closed or open sets, and neither open nor closed sets are not really interesting or contributing anything (according to my understanding... please correct me if I am wrong). So I am not sure why to add this layer complication.
 
mr.tea said:
Yes. A set ##S## is a neighborhood of a point ##s\in X## if there is an open set ##U## containing ##s## and is contained in ##S## (##s\in U\subset S##).
Yes. That is necessary for that definition to be valid.
Being an open set is independent of being closed. A lot of the theorems are either want a closed or open sets, and neither open nor closed sets are not really interesting or contributing anything (according to my understanding... please correct me if I am wrong). So I am not sure why to add this layer complication.
I'm not sure which case you think is a "layer complication". The difference between the definitions is really cosmetic. Their equivalence is easy to prove. Therefore, it can be defined either way and it only takes an easy lemma to use the other, whenever desired.
 
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FactChecker said:
Yes. That is necessary for that definition to be valid.I'm not sure which case you think is a "layer complication". The difference between the definitions is really cosmetic. Their equivalence is easy to prove. Therefore, it can be defined either way and it only takes an easy lemma to use the other, whenever desired.

By "layer of complication" I meant the definition of including an open set, at least for me, I feel that this is an unnecessary addition (if we define neighborhood to be open).
 
mr.tea said:
By "layer of complication" I meant the definition of including an open set, at least for me, I feel that this is an unnecessary addition (if we define neighborhood to be open).
My point is that the two definitions are trivially equivalent. Allowing the freedom of letting a neighborhood not be open can simplify some theorem statements.
 
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  • #10
there are open neighborhoods and there are neighborhoods. the point is that all points near your point are in the "neighborhood." no big difference. move on. this is trivial.
 
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  • #11
To be pretentious, this condition is called normality ( one of the separation axioms), which goes, I think, without being T1. And metric spaces are normal.
 
  • #12
WWGD said:
To be pretentious, this condition is called normality ( one of the separation axioms), which goes, I think, without being T1. And metric spaces are normal.

I'm curious about what condition you are talking? Normality is that every two disjoint closed sets can be separated by disjoint neighborhoods.
 
  • #13
Math_QED said:
I'm curious about what condition you are talking? Normality is that every two disjoint closed sets can be separated by disjoint neighborhoods.
This is not actual normality, but I think follows from normality. Let me double check and see if I can prove or disprove my claim.
 

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