PieceOfPi
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Hi,
I am reading Baby Rudin on my own to get prepared for the analysis class that I will be taking in the fall. I got up to this theorem, and I was wondering if someone can clarify me the proof of this (i.e. Thm 1.11, the first theorem).
1.11 Theorem: Suppose S is an ordered set with the lub property, B \subset S, B is not empty, and B is bounded below. Let L be the set of all lower bounds of B. Then, \alpha = sup L exists, and \alpha = inf B. In particular, inf B exists in S.
(The Part of) Proof: Since B is bounded below, L is not empty. Since L consists of exactly those y \in S, which satisfy the inequality y \leq x for every x \in B, we see that every x \in B is an upper bound of L. Thus L is bounded above. Our hypothesis is abound S implies therefore that L has a supremum in S; call it \alpha.
The part I underlined is where I want to be clarified. I understand that S has an lub property, and that implies that if E \subset S, E is not empty, and E is bounded above, then sup E exists in S (EDIT: Originally it said "... then sup E exists in E, until rasmhop pointed out the misprint.). While I understand why L is bounded above, I am not clear on how this proves the existence of sup L. My guess is that we're concerned about the set K \subset S \cap L, and by definition sup K exists, and thus sup L exists, but my guess could be wrong.
Please let me know if you can help me out. Notice that I only put the part of the proof here since I believe the rest is irrelevant, but please let me know if you want to read the whole proof--I can always edit it later.
Thanks.
I am reading Baby Rudin on my own to get prepared for the analysis class that I will be taking in the fall. I got up to this theorem, and I was wondering if someone can clarify me the proof of this (i.e. Thm 1.11, the first theorem).
1.11 Theorem: Suppose S is an ordered set with the lub property, B \subset S, B is not empty, and B is bounded below. Let L be the set of all lower bounds of B. Then, \alpha = sup L exists, and \alpha = inf B. In particular, inf B exists in S.
(The Part of) Proof: Since B is bounded below, L is not empty. Since L consists of exactly those y \in S, which satisfy the inequality y \leq x for every x \in B, we see that every x \in B is an upper bound of L. Thus L is bounded above. Our hypothesis is abound S implies therefore that L has a supremum in S; call it \alpha.
The part I underlined is where I want to be clarified. I understand that S has an lub property, and that implies that if E \subset S, E is not empty, and E is bounded above, then sup E exists in S (EDIT: Originally it said "... then sup E exists in E, until rasmhop pointed out the misprint.). While I understand why L is bounded above, I am not clear on how this proves the existence of sup L. My guess is that we're concerned about the set K \subset S \cap L, and by definition sup K exists, and thus sup L exists, but my guess could be wrong.
Please let me know if you can help me out. Notice that I only put the part of the proof here since I believe the rest is irrelevant, but please let me know if you want to read the whole proof--I can always edit it later.
Thanks.
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