gwsinger
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Suppose we have non-empty A_{1} and non-empty A_{2} which are both open. By "open" I mean all points of A_{1} and A_{2} are internal points. There is an argument -- which I have seen online and in textbooks -- that A_{1} \cap A_{2} = A is open (assuming A is non-empty) since:
1. For some x \in A, A_{1}, A_{2} we have neighborhoods N_{1} and N_{2} around x of radii r_{1} and r_{2} respectively, such that N_{1} \subset A_{1} and N_{2} \subset A_{2}. We know this since A_{1} and A_{2} are stipulated to be open.
2. If we take min(r_{1},r_{2}) = r we can then construct a neighborhood N of radius r around x and (this is the part that seems false to me) we can somehow KNOW that N \subset A and therefore conclude that A is open.
But why (2)? How do we KNOW that N \subset A? Why can't N_{1} \subset A_{1} and N_{2} \subset A_{2} but nevertheless N \not \subset A?
1. For some x \in A, A_{1}, A_{2} we have neighborhoods N_{1} and N_{2} around x of radii r_{1} and r_{2} respectively, such that N_{1} \subset A_{1} and N_{2} \subset A_{2}. We know this since A_{1} and A_{2} are stipulated to be open.
2. If we take min(r_{1},r_{2}) = r we can then construct a neighborhood N of radius r around x and (this is the part that seems false to me) we can somehow KNOW that N \subset A and therefore conclude that A is open.
But why (2)? How do we KNOW that N \subset A? Why can't N_{1} \subset A_{1} and N_{2} \subset A_{2} but nevertheless N \not \subset A?