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mathbuster
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Has the completeness Axiom been disproved? see completenessaxiom.com .
losiu99 said:"Then there exists a b in E such that b>r for all r in (Statement B)."
For every r there exists such b, in general there is no universal b for all r.
JThompson said:Which Ordered Fields axioms in particular do you think it contradicts?
adriank said:The completeness axiom is clearly not inconsistent with ordered field axioms, since we have a model of a complete ordered field (such as the field consisting of equivalence classes of Cauchy sequences of rational numbers, which surely exists).
Wizlem said:I believe the error occurs in the line "This would mean that there exists an element b in E such that for each Real number r, either r<b or r>b. In this case, b would not be a real number because for each Real number r, either r<b or r>b." Like losiu99 said, for every r you find can find a b special to that r so for each r you can always find a b that is either less than r or is greater than r. In essence, you can always find a b that is not equal to r. There is no contradiction.
"Suppose that none of the real numbers r, which are specified in (Statement B), are upper bounds of E. "mathbuster said:Suppose the set E:={1,2,3}. Suppose r=5 and M=6. Then for every specified 'r' there does not exist an element b in E such that b>r.
How about Dedekind cuts?mathbuster said:Proofs regarding Cauchy sequences rely on the Completeness Axiom.
Your next comment suggests you mean that "if you assume this is false" rather than "do not assume this is true".mathbuster said:The Completeness Axiom states that all nonempty subsets of the Real numbers which is bounded above has a supremum. If you do not assume that this is true
mathbuster said:Consider the following sets: A:={c: c<1} , E:={b: 1<b<=3/2 - c/2 for all c in A}
Using the Completeness Axiom, Set E has a Supremum and therefore is empty. However, assuming that some nonempty subsets of the reals do not have a supremum, E is not empty.
The Completeness Axiom is a fundamental principle in mathematics that states that any non-empty set of real numbers that is bounded above must have a least upper bound.
In 1903, the mathematician Georg Cantor constructed a counterexample to the Completeness Axiom known as the Cantor set. This set is uncountable and bounded, but it has no least upper bound.
The disproval of the Completeness Axiom has significant implications for the foundations of mathematics. It challenges the idea that the real numbers are complete and highlights the limitations of our understanding of infinity.
The Completeness Axiom is a crucial principle in calculus, particularly in the intermediate value theorem and the existence of limits. The disproval of this axiom raises questions about the validity of these concepts and could potentially lead to the development of alternative theories.
Some mathematicians have attempted to modify the Completeness Axiom to accommodate the existence of uncountable sets, but these modifications have not been widely accepted. Others have proposed entirely new axioms to replace the Completeness Axiom, but these theories are still under development and debate within the mathematical community.