Is the Empty Set Bounded? Proof and Contradiction

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on whether the empty set is bounded and whether it has a supremum (least upper bound). Participants explore definitions, conventions, and proofs related to the properties of the empty set in the context of real numbers and extended real numbers.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that by convention, the supremum of the empty set is -∞, but they do not provide formal proofs.
  • Others argue that since the empty set has no elements, it has no bounds, and thus any bounds are prescribed by convention.
  • Some participants emphasize that the question specifically asks for the least upper bound, not just any bounds.
  • One participant states that if a subset of R is bounded, then a supremum exists, but for the empty set, there is no bound and thus no supremum exists.
  • Another participant provides a proof by contradiction, arguing that assuming the empty set has a least upper bound leads to a contradiction.
  • Some participants discuss the completeness axiom, noting that it applies to non-empty subsets of R and does not address the empty set, leading to the conclusion that the empty set does not have a least upper bound in real numbers.
  • One participant introduces the concept of extended real numbers, suggesting that in this context, the empty set can be bounded by -∞.
  • There are discussions about the definition of vacuous truth and its implications for the empty set being bounded.
  • Some participants express confusion over the logical structure of proofs and the use of vacuous truth in mathematical arguments.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on whether the empty set is bounded or has a least upper bound. Multiple competing views are presented, with some asserting it is bounded by -∞ in the context of extended reals, while others maintain that it has no bounds in the context of real numbers.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include differing interpretations of definitions, the applicability of the completeness axiom, and the implications of using vacuous truth in proofs. The discussion reflects a range of mathematical reasoning styles and interpretations.

evagelos
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Does the empty set have a supremum ( least upper bound)? if yes, can anybody give me a proof please? if no, again a proof please?
 
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By convention it is -\infty. No proof :)
 
Focus said:
By convention it is -\infty. No proof :)

IS that new mathematics??
 
Since the set is empty, it really has no bounds. Therefore one can prescribe bounds by convention.
 
mathman said:
Since the set is empty, it really has no bounds. Therefore one can prescribe bounds by convention.

Sure when we cannot prove something we use the convention stuff
 
The empty set is bounded
 
The question is asking for the least upper bound not just for bounds
 
peos69 said:
IS that new mathematics??

No

peos69 said:
Sure when we cannot prove something we use the convention stuff

If you want to attack mathematics please publish your papers and stop posting on these forums unless you have something useful or relevant to say. Its defined this way, if you don't like it, write an article why and publish it.

peos69 said:
The empty set is bounded

Please would you tell us what the bound is?

peos69 said:
The question is asking for the least upper bound not just for bounds

If a subset of R is bounded then a supremum exists by the completeness of R. There is no bound and a supremum does not exist for the empty set.
 
YOU want to go and sleep or shall we Curry on on this thread?
 
  • #10
Focus said:
If a subset of R is bounded then a supremum exists by the completeness of R. There is no bound and a supremum does not exist for the empty set.

READ your completeness Axiom more carefully,it says:
If a NON EMPTY subset of the real Nos is bounded from above then it has a least upper bound
YOU FORGOT the NON EMPTY part,another fatal mistake.
 
  • #11
Focus: The definition of a bound (at least the one I've been taught) is that M, a real number, bounds S, a subset of the real numbers, if for all x in S, |x| <= M (and you can also define upper bound and lower bound. Clearly, a set that is bounded has both upper and lower bounds)
Since the empty set has no elements, the statement "for all x in the empty set, |x| <= M" is vacuously true no matter what M is. Therefore, every real number is a bound of the empty set.

Anyway, the completeness axiom only says that non-empty subsets of R with upper bounds have least upper bounds. It doesn't say anything about the empty set, and it's easy to prove that it does not have a least upper bound.

Proof:
Assume for sake of contradiction that the empty set has a least upper bound, we'll call it u. u-1 also bounds the empty set (since every real number bounds the empty set), so it is an upper bound. However, u-1 < u, which is the least upper bound. This is a contradiction, and therefore, the empty set has no least upper bound.
 
  • #12
Another comment, if we consider the extended real numbers (real numbers as well as positive and negative infinity), then every subset of the extended reals is trivially bounded by infinity.
Furthermore, we get that every subset of the extended reals (including the empty set) has a least upper bound in extended reals.

We can see that the proof that the empty set has no real least upper bound fails for the extended reals because it is not the case that u-1 < u when u is positive or negative infinity. However, it does show that the least upper bound cannot be a real number. Therefore, the only numbers left to check are positive and negative infinity. -infinity < infinity, and -infinity bounds the empty set above.
Since -infinity is less than or equal to every extended real number, it is true that -infinity is the least upper bound of the empty set (we cannot find an upper bound less than -infinity).
 
  • #13
In a mathematical proof we have a sequence of theorems,axioms ,definitions,logical conclusions due to the laws of logic it is so simple and powerfully.
When you say vacuously true you violate the above definition
That short of proof is used many times where people are unable to give a solid proof
like proving that the empty set is closed e.t.c e.t.c
Besides that is a semantical proof based simply on the F----->T truthfulness
In a real proof which is syntactical the words true false are not used.
hence the proof that the empty set is bounded from above
is......pending
 
  • #14
LukeD said:
Anyway, the completeness axiom only says that non-empty subsets of R with upper bounds have least upper bounds. It doesn't say anything about the empty set, and it's easy to prove that it does not have a least upper bound.

Yes, it has no real upper bound, but typically the extended reals are used for bounds. In that case it's -\infty.
 
  • #15
Oh, LukeD, I see you addressed my above point in your second post. Sorry about that.

peos69 said:
Besides that is a semantical proof based simply on the F----->T truthfulness
In a real proof which is syntactical the words true false are not used.
hence the proof that the empty set is bounded from above
is......pending

Are you saying that (1) you don't like RAA proofs, (2) that you're a constructivist, (3) that you prefer paraconsistent to classical logic, or that (4) \top and \bot are not technically valid symbols in 'official' proofs?

LukeD's first proof combines with his remark in the second to form a constructive proof, addressing (1) and (2). For (4), proofs can be rewritten to avoid these symbols, using expressions known to be true or false: say \forall x x=x and its negation. I'm not sure what complications would result here from using a paraconsistent framework, though.
 
  • #16
LukeD said:
Focus: The definition of a bound (at least the one I've been taught) is that M, a real number, bounds S, a subset of the real numbers, if for all x in S, |x| <= M (and you can also define upper bound and lower bound. Clearly, a set that is bounded has both upper and lower bounds)
Since the empty set has no elements, the statement "for all x in the empty set, |x| <= M" is vacuously true no matter what M is. Therefore, every real number is a bound of the empty set.

There is no x an element of the empty set. Thats a bit of a contradictory statement to make. I am not worried about the M part, its the bit that says for all x in empty set.
 
  • #17
Focus said:
There is no x an element of the empty set. Thats a bit of a contradictory statement to make. I am not worried about the M part, its the bit that says for all x in empty set.
But that's the point -- the statement "for all x in the empty set <blah blah blah>" is vacuously true no matter what, since there is no x in the empty set.
 
  • #18
morphism said:
But that's the point -- the statement "for all x in the empty set <blah blah blah>" is vacuously true no matter what, since there is no x in the empty set.

Hmm sorry my bad. Might be more useful to define it like for all x, x in empty set implies x is less or equal than M.
 
  • #19
Focus said:
Hmm sorry my bad. Might be more useful to define it like for all x, x in empty set implies x is less or equal than M.

i'm pretty sure that "for all x in S, P(x)" is equivalent to (if not in fact defined to be) "for all x, x in S => P(x)"
 
  • #20
Give me a definition of the 'Vacuously true' expression please
 
  • #21
LukeD said:
.

Proof:
Assume for sake of contradiction that the empty set has a least upper bound, we'll call it u. u-1 also bounds the empty set (since every real number bounds the empty set), so it is an upper bound. However, u-1 < u, which is the least upper bound. This is a contradiction, and therefore, the empty set has no least upper bound.

since u is the least upper bound we have u<u-1 and not u-1<u so where is the contradiction
 
  • #23
evagelos said:
since u is the least upper bound we have u<u-1 and not u-1<u so where is the contradiction

For any real number it's the case that x - 1 < x (you're subtracting 1, so you get a smaller number). So we have both u < u - 1 (since u is the least upper bound) and u - 1 < u. This is a contradiction.
 
  • #24
  • #25
LukeD said:
.

Proof:
Assume for sake of contradiction that the empty set has a least upper bound, we'll call it u. u-1 also bounds the empty set (since every real number bounds the empty set), so it is an upper bound. However, u-1 < u, which is the least upper bound. This is a contradiction, and therefore, the empty set has no least upper bound.

But you do not mention that u<u-1 in your proof
 
  • #26
I am sorry to say nobody yet has given me the definition of the 'Vacuously true' expression
 
  • #27
evagelos said:
I am sorry to say nobody yet has given me the definition of the 'Vacuously true' expression

Er...?
 
  • #28
evagelos said:
I am sorry to say nobody yet has given me the definition of the 'Vacuously true' expression

I thought the Wikipedia article was pretty clear. If I had to define it, I'd give you something pretty similar to the intro in the Wiki article, probably pretty similar wording too.
 
  • #29
LukeD said:
Since the empty set has no elements, the statement "for all x in the empty set, |x| <= M" is vacuously true no matter what M is. Therefore, every real number is a bound of the empty set.

Focus said:
There is no x an element of the empty set. Thats a bit of a contradictory statement to make. I am not worried about the M part, its the bit that says for all x in empty set.
Yes, but wording it "If x is in the empty set then |x|<= M" gives a valid, vacuously true statement.
 
  • #30
To me, "For all foo in bar, phi" is exactly the same as "For all foo, foo is in bar implies phi". Not just that they have equal truth values, but that the latter is the definition for the former.
 

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