- #1
Oxymoron
- 870
- 0
If I have a sigma-algebra, A, consisting of subsets of X where X = {1,2,3,4}, and I also have a measure on A such that
m({1,2}) = 1
m({1,2,3}) = 2
m({1,2,3,4}) = 3
Then my question is this:
Is the set E = {3} a member of the sigma-algebra?
I figured that since a subset E of X is in the s-algebra A if X\E is in A. Then since X\E = {1,2,4} and {1,2,4} is certainly a subset of X, E is in A? Is this correct?
m({1,2}) = 1
m({1,2,3}) = 2
m({1,2,3,4}) = 3
Then my question is this:
Is the set E = {3} a member of the sigma-algebra?
I figured that since a subset E of X is in the s-algebra A if X\E is in A. Then since X\E = {1,2,4} and {1,2,4} is certainly a subset of X, E is in A? Is this correct?