Equivalence Relations on {0, 1, 2, 3}: Understanding Reflexivity and Properties

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around identifying equivalence relations on the set {0, 1, 2, 3} and understanding the properties that define such relations, particularly reflexivity. Participants are examining a specific relation and questioning its reflexive property in the context of equivalence relations.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants are attempting to clarify the definition of reflexivity and its implications for the given relation. Questions arise about why certain pairs are necessary for reflexivity and the meaning of ordered pairs in this context.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants seeking clarification on reflexivity and its requirements. Some have offered definitions and examples, while others express confusion about specific pairs and their significance in determining reflexivity.

Contextual Notes

There is an emphasis on the need for all elements in the set to be related to themselves for reflexivity, and participants are exploring the implications of this requirement. The original poster has indicated a time constraint due to an upcoming exam.

hammonjj
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Homework Statement


Which of these relations on {0, 1, 2, 3} are equivalence relations? Determine the properties of an equivalence relation that the others lack

a) { (0,0), (0,2), (2,0), (2,2), (2,3), (3,2), (3,3) }

This one is not reflexive

Homework Equations


I understand that reflective means a=a, but I don't understand how this one isn't. I think the real issue here is that I obviously don't understand exactly what reflexive really means.

Any help would be GREAT as I have an exam tomorrow morning and this is proving to be more difficult than I expected.
 
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For the relation R to be reflexive, you must have aRa for all a in {0, 1, 2, 3}.
 
vela said:
For the relation R to be reflexive, you must have aRa for all a in {0, 1, 2, 3}.

I apologize, but can you spell it out for me? I guess I don't understand why (1,1) is the problem, but not (1,0) and (0,1).

Thanks!
 
Do you understand what the ordered pair (1,0) means in the context of relations?
 
vela said:
Do you understand what the ordered pair (1,0) means in the context of relations?

I think it means, in order to me an Equivalence Relation, there must also exist (0,1). Correct?
 
Why would it mean that?
 
hammonjj said:

Homework Statement


Which of these relations on {0, 1, 2, 3} are equivalence relations? Determine the properties of an equivalence relation that the others lack

a) { (0,0), (0,2), (2,0), (2,2), (2,3), (3,2), (3,3) }

This one is not reflexive

Homework Equations


I understand that reflective means a=a, but I don't understand how this one isn't. I think the real issue here is that I obviously don't understand exactly what reflexive really means.

Any help would be GREAT as I have an exam tomorrow morning and this is proving to be more difficult than I expected.

As an exercise, try finding the smallest set containing the above, which is also an equivalence relation. This idea, the completion of a set, is a pervasive one in advanced maths.
 
Let ##a, b \in X## and ##R \subset X\times X##. When you say ##(a,b)\in R##, it means aRb, that is, a is related to b.

For a relation R to be reflexive, you must have that for every element a in X, aRa or, in ordered-pair notation, ##(a,a) \in R##. Do you see now why your problem's R isn't reflexive?
 
hammonjj said:
I understand that reflective means a=a, but I don't understand how this one isn't. I think the real issue here is that I obviously don't understand exactly what reflexive really means.

Reflexive doesn't mean a = a. The equality is a relation of equivalence, but a relation of equivalence need not be "=".
 
  • #10
Reflexive means "if a is in the set, then (a, a) must be in the relation". 1 is in the set. Is (1, 1) in the relation?
 

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