14-240/Tutorial-October7: Difference between revisions

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Can you spot the subtle error in each?
Can you spot the subtle error in each?
<math>Insert formula here</math>





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In Proof 2, the only thing that is shown is that <math>(0, 0)</math> is not the additive identity. For Proof 2 to be correct, either plug in a nonzero vector or show that <math>(0, 0)</math> is the additive identity by some other means, which introduces a contradiction.
In Proof 2, the only thing that is shown is that <math>(0, 0)</math> is not the additive identity. For Proof 2 to be correct, either plug in a nonzero vector that is not <math>(0, 0)</math> or show that <math>(0, 0)</math> is the additive identity by some other means, which introduces a contradiction.


==Nikita==
==Nikita==

Revision as of 16:37, 14 October 2014

Boris

Subtle Errors in Proofs

Check out these proofs:

Proof 1

Let , be subspaces of a vector space . We show that is a subspace

.

Assume that is a subspace.
Let , .
Then .
Then .
Then .
Case 1: :
Since and has additive inverses, then .
Then .
Case 2: :
Since and has additive inverses, then .
Then .
Then .
Then . Q.E.D.
Proof 2

Let . Then , define

and . We show that is not a vector

space over .

We show that is not commutative.
Let .
Then .
Then is not commutative.
Then is not a vector space. Q.E.D.


Can you spot the subtle error in each?


In Proof 1, the equivalence of the second last line and the last line is not obvious:

(1) Let . [Many lines] Then .

(2) Then .


Rewrite sentences (1) and (2) into a form that is easier to compare:

(1) .

(2) .


For Proof 1 to be correct, we must show that sentences (1) and (2) are equivalent. Alternatively, alter the structure of Proof 1 into a proof by contradiction or into proof in which you assume that one of the conditions in the disjunction is satisfied.


In Proof 2, the only thing that is shown is that is not the additive identity. For Proof 2 to be correct, either plug in a nonzero vector that is not or show that is the additive identity by some other means, which introduces a contradiction.

Nikita