User:IssaRice/Understanding definitions: Difference between revisions
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| Check it is consistent with the old one || If the definition supersedes an older definition or it clobbers up a previously defined notation || | | Check it is consistent with the old one || If the definition supersedes an older definition or it clobbers up a previously defined notation || | ||
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| Disambiguate similar-seeming concepts || | | Disambiguate similar-seeming concepts || || || || (Example from Tao) "Disjoint" and "distinct" are both terms that apply to two sets. They even sound similar. Are they the same concept? Does one imply the other? It turns out, the answer is "no" to both: <math>\{1,2\}</math> and <math>\{2,3\}</math> are distinct but not disjoint, and <math>\emptyset</math> and <math>\emptyset</math> are disjoint but not distinct. | ||
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Revision as of 21:33, 3 December 2018
Understanding a definition in mathematics is a pretty complicated and laborious process. The following table summarizes some of the things one might do when trying to understand a new definition.
Step | Condition | Description | Purpose | Example |
---|---|---|---|---|
Type-checking and parsing | ||||
Checking assumptions of objects introduced | Remove or alter each assumption of the objects that have been introduced in the definition to see why they are necessary. | |||
Come up with examples | ||||
Come up with counterexamples | ||||
Writing out a wrong version of the definition | See this post by Tim Gowers (search "wrong versions" on the page). | |||
Understand the kind of definition | Generally a definition will do one of the following things: (1) it will construct a brand new type of object (e.g. definition of a function); (2) it will take an existing type of object and create a predicate to describe some subclass of that type of object (e.g. take the integers and create the predicate even); (3) it will define an operation on some class of objects (e.g. take integers and define the operation of addition). | |||
Check that it is well-defined | If the definition defines an operations | |||
Check it is consistent with the old one | If the definition supersedes an older definition or it clobbers up a previously defined notation | |||
Disambiguate similar-seeming concepts | (Example from Tao) "Disjoint" and "distinct" are both terms that apply to two sets. They even sound similar. Are they the same concept? Does one imply the other? It turns out, the answer is "no" to both: and are distinct but not disjoint, and and are disjoint but not distinct. |
See also
External links
- https://www.maa.org/node/121566 lists some other steps for both theorems and definitions