JamesGold
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Every resource I've looked at just lists the axioms but doesn't tell how or why they were arrived at. To what extent are they arbitrary?
Consider the set ##\mathbb R^2=\{(x,y)|x,y\in\mathbb R\}## of ordered pairs of real numbers. If we define the addition of two arbitrary members of this set byJamesGold said:Every resource I've looked at just lists the axioms but doesn't tell how or why they were arrived at. To what extent are they arbitrary?
JamesGold said:To what extent are they arbitrary?
The best one can hope to prove is that there is a vector space in the branch of mathematics defined by this other set of axioms. If you just supply the missing details from what I said about ##\mathbb R^2## above, you're almost done with such a proof.Stephen Tashi said:If you want to find a lower level mathematical system that can be used to prove the axioms of vector space, I don't know of any work that has done that, but someone else on the forum probably does.