Help finding a counterexample for a relation's transitivity

  • Thread starter Thread starter 1MileCrash
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Counterexample
1MileCrash
Messages
1,338
Reaction score
41

Homework Statement



I'll spare most of the details, R = {(x,y) | |x-y| < 5}

I need to find a counter-example to show that it is not transitive. I'm having trouble.


The Attempt at a Solution




First, in order to find a counter example, I know this must be satisfied:

| x - y | < 5
|y - z | < 5
|x - z | >= 5



So to remove the absolute values, I did (which makes sense to me on paper):

-5 < x - y < 5
-5 < y - z < 5

x - z > 5 or x - z <= -5

So to isolate x and y, I did this (which again, only makes sense to me on paper)

-5 + y < x < 5 + y

-5 - y < -z < 5 - y
-5 + y < z < 5 + y

So I have "information" about both z and x, but how can I use that in:

x - z > 5 or x - z <= -5

To make it say something about y? (since that's what I chose to express x and z in terms of)


I feel like I essentially have a system of inequalities:

-5 + y < z < 5 + y
-5 + y < x < 5 + y
x - z > 5 or x - z <= -5


Am I on the right track here? I'm just doing what makes sense to me, I've never dealt with inequalities in any classes in this way.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You are probably better off just fiddling with some numbers to create a counterexample. Is (1,5) in your relation? Now you want another ordered pair that has a 5 in the first position that violates transitivity. Just play with it.
 
I did find a counter example that way, x = 0, y = 1, z = 5, but is there a more methodical approach?
 
1MileCrash said:

Homework Statement



I'll spare most of the details, R = {(x,y) | |x-y| < 5}

I need to find a counter-example to show that it is not transitive. I'm having trouble.


The Attempt at a Solution




First, in order to find a counter example, I know this must be satisfied:

| x - y | < 5
|y - z | < 5
|x - z | >= 5



So to remove the absolute values, I did (which makes sense to me on paper):

-5 < x - y < 5
-5 < y - z < 5

x - z > 5 or x - z <= -5

So to isolate x and y, I did this (which again, only makes sense to me on paper)

-5 + y < x < 5 + y

-5 - y < -z < 5 - y
-5 + y < z < 5 + y

So I have "information" about both z and x, but how can I use that in:

x - z > 5 or x - z <= -5

To make it say something about y? (since that's what I chose to express x and z in terms of)


I feel like I essentially have a system of inequalities:

-5 + y < z < 5 + y
-5 + y < x < 5 + y
x - z > 5 or x - z <= -5


Am I on the right track here? I'm just doing what makes sense to me, I've never dealt with inequalities in any classes in this way.

This is a lot to go through, so I'll instead appeal to your geometric intuition. a and b are related (i.e., aRb) if a is within 5 units of b. Similarly, b R c if b and c are within 5 units of each other. On the number line, can you come up with numbers a, b, and c so that a R b and b R c, but a is more than 5 units from c? IOW, it's not true that a R c.
 
1MileCrash said:
I did find a counter example that way, x = 0, y = 1, z = 5, but is there a more methodical approach?

Probably, but I think that would be more trouble than it's worth.
 
I see.

Thanks for the visual approach idea, it becomes simple if I draw a number line. All I did was draw two points that were 4 units away, then the next one 4 units away from that one, thus the first and third are 8 units away. Called the middle one 0, making the other two -4 and 4.

So x = -4, y = 0, z = 4 is a counter example.
 
1MileCrash said:
I see.

Thanks for the visual approach idea, it becomes simple if I draw a number line.
Keep that in mind. If a problem lends itself to a graphical or geometric approach, always give that some thought. Don't limit yourself by taking a strictly algebraic approach.
1MileCrash said:
All I did was draw two points that were 4 units away, then the next one 4 units away from that one, thus the first and third are 8 units away. Called the middle one 0, making the other two -4 and 4.

So x = -4, y = 0, z = 4 is a counter example.
 
http://www.infoocean.info/avatar1.jpg You are probably better off just fiddling with some numbers to create a counterexample
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Alright guys, I wasn't sure if this warranted a new thread because I'm working the same type of problem again. Again, it's transitivity (reflexive and symmetric are very trivial for my problems).

This time the relation is x^2 + y^2 = 1.

I figured that a counter example is any time x =/= y =/= z =/= sqrt(.5) like so (besides from knowing that if they weren't all equal, it can't work):

x^2 + y^2 = 1
y^2 + z^2 = 1

So x^2 + z^2 = 2(1-y^2)

2(1-y^2) =/= 1
1-y^2 =/= .5
-y^2 =/= -.5
y^2 =/= .5
y =/= sqrt(.5)

I have to show some reasoning for my counter-example. Is this reasonable and correct?

Thanks again!
 
  • #10
1MileCrash said:
Alright guys, I wasn't sure if this warranted a new thread because I'm working the same type of problem again. Again, it's transitivity (reflexive and symmetric are very trivial for my problems).

This time the relation is x^2 + y^2 = 1.

I figured that a counter example is any time x =/= y =/= z =/= sqrt(.5) like so (besides from knowing that if they weren't all equal, it can't work):

x^2 + y^2 = 1
y^2 + z^2 = 1

So x^2 + z^2 = 2(1-y^2)

2(1-y^2) =/= 1
1-y^2 =/= .5
-y^2 =/= -.5
y^2 =/= .5
y =/= sqrt(.5)

I have to show some reasoning for my counter-example. Is this reasonable and correct?

Thanks again!

What is your domain for x and y? I can certainly see that is symmetric. Why is it reflexive?
 
  • #11
It's not reflexive. I didn't mean to imply that it is "trivially reflexive" only that determining whether or not it is is trivial. Counter example is the same thing because it still requires that they are both the same (since x = x) and for both of the variables in x^2 + y^2 = 1 to be the same, there is only one solution, sqrt(.5).

This is how I determined my counter example for transitivity beforehand.

do you agree?
 
  • #12
1MileCrash said:
It's not reflexive. I didn't mean to imply that it is "trivially reflexive" only that determining whether or not it is is trivial. Counter example is the same thing because it still requires that they are both the same (since x = x) and for both of the variables in x^2 + y^2 = 1 to be the same, there is only one solution, sqrt(.5).

This is how I determined my counter example for transitivity beforehand.

do you agree?

Not really. I don't follow your logic at all. 0^2+1^2=1, so (0,1) is in your relation. So is (1,0). (0,0) isn't. Doesn't that mean it's not transitive? I think you are taking an overcomplicated approach again.
 
Last edited:
  • #13
Dick said:
Not really. I don't follow your logic at all. 0^2+1^2=1, so (0,1) is in your relation. So is (1,0). (0,0) isn't. Doesn't that mean it's not transitive?

I'm not sure I understand what you mean. My work shows that it's not transitive, because the only way that (x,y), (y,z), and (x,z) are all in the relation is if x = y = z = sqrt(.5).

So a counterexample is anything other than that case. So it's not transitive.

Similarly, regarding reflexivity, a counter example is anything other than the case x = y = sqrt(.5).
 
  • #14
1MileCrash said:
I'm not sure I understand what you mean. My work shows that it's not transitive, because the only way that (x,y), (y,z), and (x,z) are all in the relation is if x = y = z = sqrt(.5).

So a counterexample is anything other than that case. So it's not transitive.

How about x=(-sqrt(.5))? I'm not really saying that you can't do it that way. But you are ignoring the simple counterexamples and going for a more complicated reasoning. I don't know why.
 
  • #15
I guess because I figure that finding counter-examples will get more difficult, and I think that finding a "template" for a counter example in a certain problem is good for when that happens. I don't really want to just find one from intuition and plug it in. I know that a single counter example will always do the trick to disprove something, but I am curious to know what the features of the counter examples are, I guess.

But my thought boiled down to this:

All variables must be equal for reflexivity, by definition, and they all must be equal for transitivity, in this case, due to the nature of the relation in that if I can add some y^2 to x^2 to get 1, and can add some z^2 to x^2 to get 1, then z^2 must equal y^2. For that to be the case, y^2 + z^2 = 1 => y = sqrt(.5); z = sqrt(.5).

And, since by that reasoning y = sqrt(.5),

x^2 + .5 = 1
x^2 = .5
x = sqrt(.5)

So x = y = z is the only way that (x,y), (y,z), and (x,z) could possibly be in the relation.

EDIT: Though I agree that it would be truly correct to say:

|x| = |y| = |z|
 
  • #16
1MileCrash said:
I guess because I figure that finding counter-examples will get more difficult, and I think that finding a "template" for a counter example in a certain problem is good for when that happens. I don't really want to just find one from intuition and plug it in. I know that a single counter example will always do the trick to disprove something, but I am curious to know what the features of the counter examples are, I guess.

But my thought boiled down to this:

All variables must be equal for reflexivity, by definition, and they all must be equal for transitivity, in this case, due to the nature of the relation in that if I can add some y^2 to x^2 to get 1, and can add some z^2 to x^2 to get 1, then z^2 must equal y^2. For that to be the case, y^2 + z^2 = 1 => y = sqrt(.5); z = sqrt(.5).

And, since by that reasoning y = sqrt(.5),

x^2 + .5 = 1
x^2 = .5
x = sqrt(.5)

So x = y = z is the only way that (x,y), (y,z), and (x,z) could possibly be in the relation.

Your reasoning is roughly correct, but you are forgetting that x^2=.5 has two solutions. Turning a problem where you can simply guess counterexamples into something more complicated isn't what you want to do. There's no magic formula that covers all cases. Your first problem turned into a fairly complicated system of inequalities and this turns in a more complicated problem involving quadratics. Those are two different things. Just grab the simple way.
 
  • #17
For this problem, I don't know if you are seeing the geometry involved. x is related to y if x2 + y2 = 1. IOW, if (x, y) is a point on the unit circle. Understanding that might be helpful in your work.
 
Back
Top