Kinetica said:How to show that the set does not have upper bounds?
I said that the set is not bounded above, thus it does not have upper bounds. There is no u such that for any x in R, x is less or equal to u.
I took another look and your solution was fine beside a small mistake. In the fourth line it should be x' \in S_{1} not x'\in \mathbb{R}. Then solution is fine.Kinetica said:Is there a specific reason you chose to work with x in R in order to prove the problem?
Probably I indeed wrote the nonsense, but I followed the book's solution for the supremum. It said that infimum is solved similarly. For the supremum, the book used not an x, but an outsider v to prove that v is not the lowest upper bound. Likewise, I chose an outsider t to prove that t is not the greatest lower bound.
Thank you for your help.