What kind of definition is this?

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In summary, the figure provided shows that a function ##f(x)## can have local extreme values only at specific types of points: (i) critical points, where the derivative of the function is equal to zero, (ii) singular points, where the derivative is undefined, and (iii) endpoints of the domain, which do not belong to any open interval contained in the domain. The reason for this unusual definition is because the domain of the function can be strange, such as the Cantor set which contains no interior points. Therefore, the endpoints must be considered separately. Additionally, the use of open intervals is preferred in mathematics, with closed intervals being considered as a complement to open intervals.
  • #1
mcastillo356
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TL;DR Summary
Pseudophilosophal question about a definition
Hi, PF, I've got a quote, and a philosophical question

Figure shown suggests that a function ##f(x)## can have local extreme values only at ##x## points of three special types:
(i) Critical points of ##f## (points ##x## in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)## where ##f'(x)=0##)
(ii) Singular points of ##f## (points ##x## in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)## where ##f'(x)## is not defined)
(iii) Endpoints of the domain of ##f## (points in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)## that do not belong to any open interval contained in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)##)
0.jpg
And now my "brainstorm": (iii) is not defined as "reductio ad absurdum"; not "principle of exclusion".
My question: what kind of argument makes use of? I'm just overthinking? Why does talk about closed intervals in such a "implicit" (suggested, but not communicated directly) way?
PS: I'm not sure of the LaTeX used, and insecure about "Preview" tool, so I will click "Post thread". Please check. Thanks!
 
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  • #2
It talks about the endpoints in a weird way because the domain of f can be really weird. For example the cantor set contains no interior, so any function defined on it is continuous.

Edit: actually I'm not confident in this claim. But you can imagine some bizarre domains and functions where the endpoints don't just look like the endpoints of closed intervals.
 
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  • #3
It seems just saying there is no point beyond end point in words of mathematics.
 
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  • #4
mcastillo356 said:
And now my "brainstorm": (iii) is not defined as "reductio ad absurdum"; not "principle of exclusion".
I'm not sure that it's useful to categorize these parts of the definition.
In the figure you attached, points a and b are, respectively, a local maximum point and a local minimum point. At neither one is the derivative of the function equal to zero, and at neither is the derivative undefined (although you will need to use one-sided limits for each one).
Clearly each of these points has a y-value greater/smaller than all other points in the immediate vicinity, which makes them local extreme points.
mcastillo356 said:
My question: what kind of argument makes use of? I'm just overthinking?
This.
 
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  • #5
Hi, PF

Office_Shredder, very inquisitive your message, but far from my background.
anuttarasammyak, a concise comment.
Mark44 said:
I'm not sure that it's useful to categorize these parts of the definition.
In the figure you attached, points a and b are, respectively, a local maximum point and a local minimum point. At neither one is the derivative of the function equal to zero, and at neither is the derivative undefined (although you will need to use one-sided limits for each one).
Clearly each of these points has a y-value greater/smaller than all other points in the immediate vicinity, which makes them local extreme points.
Still stucked, I've read it, but... Could explain further?
Questions:
Why ##a## and ##b## are, respectively, a local maximum point and a local minimum point?. It's clear what you say later, but I don't relate it with the sentence I want to understand.
 
  • #6
mcastillo356 said:
Why ##a## and ##b## are, respectively, a local maximum point and a local minimum point?. It's clear what you say later, but I don't relate it with the sentence I want to understand.
##a## is a local maximum for the function because it fits the definition of a local maximum.

1. It is within the domain of the function.
2. There is a neighborhood around a within which all points that fall within the domain of the function have function values less than or equal to that of a.

Similarly, ##b## is a local minimum because it fits the definition of a local minimum.
 
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  • #7
If you are wondering why they use open interval not closed interval, I see current standard mathematics prefer open interval as primary idea and introduce closed interval as its complementary.
 
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  • #8
jbriggs444, anuttarasammyak, PF, what is my question? That's the question. Someone said. I've been thinking... (don't scareo0)): Why does my textbook, "Calculus", by Robert A. Adams, defines endpoints in terms of open intervals?
My opinion:
(i) endpoints appear, closed intervals appear
(ii) when I look for the meaning of a word, I will never find the word, they use another words
Does it make sense?
 
  • #9
mcastillo356 said:
Why a and b are, respectively, a local maximum point and a local minimum point?
To add to what @jbriggs444 already said, look at the graph you attached. Are there any points near a that have larger y values? Are there any points near b that have smaller y values?
Here "near" should be interpreted to mean between a and x1, and between x6 and b, respectively.
mcastillo356 said:
My opinion:
(i) endpoints appear, closed intervals appear
With an open interval, every point is an interior point; i.e., every point has neighbors that also belong to the open interval on either side of that point. With a closed interval, the endpoints have neighboring points that are in the interval only on one side.
mcastillo356 said:
(ii) when I look for the meaning of a word, I will never find the word, they use another words
That's how definitions work -- most often the meaning of a word will be described in a string of words rather than by a single word. If you're looking for a one-word meaning, that would be a synonym, another word that means the same thing.
 
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  • #10
If I talk sincerely... I'll be direct: I'm going to publish the same topic at a Spanish math forum. Neigbourhood... that's topology... I'll be back (bad joke:smile:)
See you later, greetings
 
  • #11
remark: the cantor set is infinite, bounded and closed. thus it contains some of its own accumulation points, at which the value of a continuous function is determined by its values on the other points.
 
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  • #12
Hi, mathwonk, PF
I've already published at Spanish math forum "Rincón Matemático" (Mathematical Corner, translated). My aim is to work it out, put things in common, solve my quests...
We are in touch
 
  • #13
anuttarasammyak said:
If you are wondering why they use open interval not closed interval, I see current standard mathematics prefer open interval as primary idea and introduce closed interval as its complementary.
(Edited) No, the complement of an open interval is not necessarily even an interval.

Also consider the intervals ## [0, 1) ## which is neither closed nor open and ##(- \infty, + \infty)## which is both closed and open.

The definitions are clear (from MathWorld).
  • An open interval is an interval that does not include its end points.
  • A closed interval is an interval that includes all of its limit points.
 
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  • #14
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  • #15
They define "open" first and then define "closed" making use of "open".
 
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  • #16
anuttarasammyak said:
By definition, a subset
A
of a topological space
(X, \tau)
is called closed if its complement
X\setminus A
is an open subset of
(X, \tau)
;
Yes but that is not the same as saying the 'idea' of an open interval is complementary to the 'idea' of a closed interval, and I have edited my post to provide examples which explain why.
 
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  • #17
Well, let's read the definition of Local Extreme Values, previous to the types of them: now, the question again
mcastillo356 said:
Summary:: Pseudophilosophal question about a definition

Hi, PF, I've got a quote, and a philosophical question

Figure shown suggests that a function ##f(x)## can have local extreme values only at ##x## points of three special types:
(i) Critical points of ##f## (points ##x## in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)## where ##f'(x)=0##)
(ii) Singular points of ##f## (points ##x## in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)## where ##f'(x)## is not defined)
(iii) Endpoints of the domain of ##f## (points in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)## that do not belong to any open interval contained in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)##)
View attachment 291084
(iii) Endpoints of the domain of ##f## (points in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)## that do not belong to any open interval contained in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)##): What does it mean?
My opinion:
1- We are talking about points at the end of something: an interval
2- They do not belong to any open interval contained in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)##
3- Therefore, they are the extremes of a closed interval.

PS: I will probably edit, I have great doubts about this post. Just want to make my contribution, but still indecisive
 
  • #18
Example

##f:(-2,-1]\cup \{0\}\cup [1,2)\to \mathbb{R}\qquad f(x)=x.##
- 0 is an endpoint, and a local maximum and a local minimum
 
  • #19
pbuk said:
(Edited) No, the complement of an open interval is not necessarily even an interval.

Also consider the intervals ## [0, 1) ## which is neither closed nor open and ##(- \infty, + \infty)## which is both closed and open.

The definitions are clear (from MathWorld).
  • An open interval is an interval that does not include its end points.
  • A closed interval is an interval that includes all of its limit points.

mcastillo356 said:
1- We are talking about points at the end of something: an interval
We are talking about points that exist at the end of a bounded interval, ## \pm \infty ## would be troublesome here.
mcastillo356 said:
2- They do not belong to any open interval contained in ##\mathfrak{D}(f)##
Yes
mcastillo356 said:
3- Therefore, they are the extremes of a closed interval.
Yes
mcastillo356 said:
##f:(-2,-1]\cup \{0\}\cup [1,2)\to \mathbb{R}\qquad f(x)=x.##
- 0 is an endpoint, and a local maximum and a local minimum
Yes. ## 0 ## is also a singular point.
 
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  • #20
jbriggs444 said:
##a## is a local maximum for the function because it fits the definition of a local maximum.

1. It is within the domain of the function.
2. There is a neighborhood around a within which all points that fall within the domain of the function have function values less than or equal to that of a.

Similarly, ##b## is a local minimum because it fits the definition of a local minimum.
Might the following capture the concept of neighborhood for the case of ##a##, always in a naive way?
$$\exists{\;h>0}\quad\mbox{such that if}\;x\in{(a-h,a+h)}\cap{\mbox{dom}(f)}\quad\mbox{then}\;f(x)\leq{f(a)}$$
 
  • #21
mcastillo356 said:
Summary:: Pseudophilosophal question about a definition

(iii) Endpoints of the domain of f (points in D(f) that do not belong to any open interval contained in D(f))
We may say it in the way that "The points that have no (open) Neighborhood.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neighbourhood_(mathematics)
I hope it may help your deeper understanding.
 
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  • #22
$$\exists{\;h>0}\quad\mbox{such that if}\;x\in{(a-h,a+h)}\cap{\mbox{dom}(f)}\quad\mbox{then}\;f(x)\leq{f(a)}\Leftrightarrow$$
$$\exists{\;h>0}\quad\mbox{such that if}\;x\in{[a,a+h)}\cap{\mbox{dom}(f)}\quad\mbox{then}\;f(x)\leq{f(a)}$$
Sorry, it was incomplete. On the path of reaching some kind of approval from you. Not now; not have a training in Topology, just searching for a fix.
Love
 
  • #23
mcastillo356 said:
$$\exists{\;h>0}\quad\mbox{such that if}\;x\in{(a-h,a+h)}\cap{\mbox{dom}(f)}\quad\mbox{then}\;f(x)\leq{f(a)}\Leftrightarrow$$
$$\exists{\;h>0}\quad\mbox{such that if}\;x\in{[a,a+h)}\cap{\mbox{dom}(f)}\quad\mbox{then}\;f(x)\leq{f(a)}$$
Sorry, it was incomplete. On the path of reaching some kind of approval from you. Not now; not have a training in Topology, just searching for a fix.
Love
Point a is apparently the left endpoint of the domain, so my preference would be the second statement. The first one isn't wrong, but needlessly mentions points in the interval (a - h, a).
 
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  • #24
Mark44 said:
Point a is apparently the left endpoint of the domain, so my preference would be the second statement. The first one isn't wrong, but needlessly mentions points in the interval (a - h, a).
Love, Physics Forums, quests solved.
 

1. What is the purpose of a definition?

A definition is used to clarify the meaning of a word or concept. It provides a clear and concise explanation of what something is or means.

2. What are the different types of definitions?

There are several types of definitions, including lexical definitions, stipulative definitions, precising definitions, theoretical definitions, and persuasive definitions. Each type serves a different purpose and is used in different contexts.

3. How do scientists use definitions?

Scientists use definitions to establish a common understanding of terms and concepts within their field of study. This allows for clear communication and avoids confusion or misunderstandings.

4. Can a definition change over time?

Yes, definitions can change over time as language and understanding of concepts evolve. This is especially true in scientific fields where new discoveries and advancements may require the reevaluation and updating of definitions.

5. What makes a good definition?

A good definition is clear, concise, and precise. It should accurately capture the essential characteristics of the word or concept being defined and be easily understood by the intended audience.

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