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00:01
So it will be $f_*([p]) = [f\circ p]$ where $p:[0, 1]\to X$ is a path with $p(0) = p(1) = x_0$ is the base point
technically you want to talk about $f:(X, x_0)\to (Y, y_0)$, a morphism of based spaces
>it just seems a little strange that the group morphism is essentially just the based topological space morphism
it isn't one, a morphism of based spaces induces a homomorphism of fundamental groups
indeed, fundamental group is a functor on the category of pointed spaces, not on the category of spaces, that's an important distinction
yeah. If you want $f:X\to Y$ to just be a continuous function, then it induces a morphism $f_*:\Pi_1(X)\to \Pi_1(Y)$ between the fundamental groupoids
i.e. $f_*$ is a functor
(here, more or less my knowledge about the subject ends :P)
00:29
Is there a standard terminology for the induced morphism from the coimage to the image?
Note that such morphism is always a bimorphism, but not necessarily an isomorphism.
@DannyuNDos I think its called pushforward sometimes
never seen that tbh
id just call it the canonical morphism
In mathematics, the direct image functor is a construction in sheaf theory that generalizes the global sections functor to the relative case. It is of fundamental importance in topology and algebraic geometry. Given a sheaf F defined on a topological space X and a continuous map f: X → Y, we can define a new sheaf f∗F on Y, called the direct image sheaf or the pushforward sheaf of F along f, such that the global sections of f∗F is given by the global sections of F. This assignment gives rise to a functor f∗ from the category of sheaves on X to the category of sheaves on Y, which is known as the...
or pullback not sure. But I think I've seen that terminology used
00:45
i know pushforward/pullback of sheaves
i dont see what they have to do with the question
just similar
WtF is coimage?
$A/\ker(f)$
cokernel of the kernel
I misunderstood the question
@Thorgott Huh?
00:51
The map $f:A\to B$ induces an isomorphism from $\text{coim}(f) = A/\ker(f)$ to $\text{im}(f)$
its one of the isomorphism theorems
Well, yes, obviously I’ve known that for 52+ years.
actually we're not talking about modules or anything so its more general definition
still, I’ve never heard of coimage. Cokernel, yes, 52 years ago.
@Thorgott That works only for algebraic structures. In general settings, the coimage is the coarsest quotient object of the domain that induces a morphism.
00:54
I hate categorical s**t.
sure, i was just thinking of a context that's not useless
its useful when you're not doing category theory and actually applying this "s**t"
that's what category theory is about after all, introducing ideas of concepts in analogy to other already existing concepts
I am opposed to formalism in mathematics for formalism’s sake.
e.g. we have products, lets generalize this notion... etc.
well, the salient point is that there's context where you can talk about coimage and image, but the natural map between them is not an isomorphism
00:57
my taste is not going to change at this point in my life.
i.e. theres contexts in which the isomorphism theorem fails
@TedShifrin Aw come on, I hope you know the beauty of coproducts.
me too, Ted. But it might be useful if you know what you're working with
e.g. for topological abelian groups, that's a very concrete example
@Thorgott Just topological spaces themselves already provide a counterexample. Namely, the identity function but the codomain has strictly coarser topology than the domain.
00:59
Thor, I’m happy with the natural isomorphism from row space (image of the transpose) to the column space (image of the map).
@Jakobian I’ve worked with plenty of notions that plenty of people consider abstract formalism …. Like sheaf cohomolgy.
@DannyuNDos that's not a pre-abelian category, these notions are hardly interesting outside of pre-abelian categories
@TedShifrin derived functors are excellent formalism :P
I don’t think in Hartshorne style ….
But I think that’s natural if you try to see where SES go ….
yes, i recently left a comment on a post about that
@AlessandroCodenotti Any idea about this? If $f:X\to Y$ is a Borel surjective map from Polish space to regular space $Y$, then assuming PFA, $Y$ is separable. What about in ZFC?
01:14
@Jakobian I think I mean that because one is defining the induced group morphism in terms of the based topological space morphism in a sort of trival (not in the sense of obvious or easy, but just almost like you are doing nothing) way, it seems like a strange example of a functor, and I thought I was maybe missing something in my understanding of the definition
its not strange at all
you take a continuous map and you lobotomize all the information from it (unneeded from algebraic topology perspective)
thus obtaining group homomorphism
Lol is lobotomize official math terminology
the point of this functor is to be able to tell something about topological spaces
maybe i was thrown because i thought the associated exercise was to sort of get familiar with functors and the fundamental group to me seems like a poor choice of an example to get familiar with functors. since there are a lot of identifications in this case which are sort of special to this case.
@Jakobian okay this is making sense now then
well, this is basically the idea behind categories
01:21
well i do have the impression that functors are the natural sort of concept you'd want to turn a problem in math structure $1$ to a related problem in math structure $2$
we translate from setting of topology to the more algebraic setting of group theory
the word is "tautological" rather than "trivial"
ah yes that is a better choice of word
many good definitions are tautological
are you familiar with Hom-functors?
cause if you squint your eyes, that's all the fundamental group functor is
i am not but i will look into it
01:23
Hom bifunctor
01:39
man, i derive an unhealthy amount of joy from proving utterly useless results
just in: if $(X,A)$ is a pair of spaces, $R$ a coherent ring, $M$ a flat and $N$ a finitely presented $R$-module, there is a convergent 2nd quadrant cohomological spectral sequence $Tor_{-p}(H^q(X,A;M),N)\Rightarrow H^{p+q}(X,A;M\otimes_RN)$
02:03
@AlessandroCodenotti Forget what I said above with $Y$ being separable under PFA
@TedShifrin hey bud! 😂 Back doing math. Any chance you could look at this question? math.stackexchange.com/questions/4865139/…
02:23
Hi @Stan. The answers are bunk. You need an orthonormal basis with $v$ as one of the vectors.
@AlessandroCodenotti Can an $L$-space be Borel image of a Polish space?
The usual thing is to find one vector $u$ orthogonal to $v$ by linear algebra (solve dot product =0), then use cross product to get $w=v\times u$. Then make unit vectors.
I give an extension for higher dimensions in $(8)$-$(10)$ of this answer.
02:42
LOL, I was trying to be as simple-minded as possible. :)
03:14
I don't see why if $f, g$ are Borel maps then $(f\times g)(x, y) = (f(x), g(y))$ wouldn't
am I missing something
oh I think I get it. Its because of sigma-algebra on the image
X4J
X4J
03:42
Suppose $P_{f}(x) = (x+1)(x-1)(x^2 + x + 1)$ is a characteristic polynomial for a linear operator $f$ where the space is $V$ and the field is $\mathbb{R}$. If for any polynomial $Q$ that divides $P_{f}$ we can find $f$-invariant subspace $W$ such that $P_{f|_W} = Q$, does it imply that $W$ is unique? (Namely there is not $W' \neq W$ with the same property for $Q$)
*Any monic polynomial Q
can i intuitively think of a deformation retraction as keeping a subset of the topological space the same, but "deforming" everything else (in a nice way)?
Deforming it to the subset by homotopy, yes.
@X4J What is special about your $P_f$ here?
04:00
Any opinions on this question? math.stackexchange.com/questions/4865494/…
I haven’t studied Mobius inversion so I can’t say, but could this actually resolve the twin prime conjecture?!
This habit of staying up late will result in my death via sleep deprivation someday
@Sahaj no
Oh, ok.
sad
Its nothing new that Daniel is posting about Collatz
oh its twin prime this time
well regardless, don't give online posts much hope
X4J
X4J
@TedShifrin Homework question and that's what I am trying to figure
04:16
You can’t notice anything special about this polynomial, X4J?
@冥王Hades I thought it already had.
@TedShifrin It will again, and then I'll once again reincarnate 243 years later.
Well, I should be gone by then .
what ever happened to your reading Pedoe’s beautiful book?
I always learn the most when I'm interested in solving a problem
Procrastination happened
Jakobian, my adviser, a most eminent 20th century geometer, said that’s how one should learn.
@冥王Hades Not just death?
X4J
X4J
04:29
@TedShifrin Obviously $P_f$ is a multiplication of two linear factors and an irreducible polynomial of degree 2. The uniqueness of the invariant spaces that correspond the linear factors is indeed clear but, for example, why would $Q(x) = (x-1)(x^2 + x + 1)$ be unique?
You still haven’t answered my explicit question.
And the direct sum of unique subspaces is unique.
X4J
X4J
Yes it clicks to me now
So if you won’t answer my question, give me an example of non-uniqueness.
X4J
X4J
04:47
I understand intuitively why it is true but I struggle to reason it by the knowledge I've gained during the course so far
@Jakobian so apparently he likes to spend his time on unsolved problems and posting them on MSE
Im guessing that must attract a lot of downvotes too
X4J
X4J
Like what would be the space that corresponds $Q = x^2 + x + 1$? I'm trying to think how I could generally find a $w \in W$ so $(w, f(w))$ forms a basis to $W$ but I fail
05:03
Yeah, that won’t be the case, because you have complex eigenvalues.
Think about $f(x)=x^2+1$.
05:21
@AlessandroCodenotti What is the family of images of Borel maps $f:\mathbb{R}\to\mathbb{R}$?
I've seen it mentioned those are analytic sets, but I feel like this might be wrong - here $f$ is not continuous but Borel
06:18
@Jakobian is still analytic sets. There is a finer Polish topology on $\Bbb R$ that makes $f$ continuous
There is a section in Kechris called something like "turning Borel sets into clopen sets" where this is explained in chapter 12 or 13 by memory
@mick
See my most recent post
That is what I have a question about
And vise versa an intro to you of my "attack style"
@Jakobian I checked, this is 13.11 in Kechris's book
 
5 hours later…
11:51
I've been looking for a beginner's friendly proof of the open mapping theorem in functional analysis. I found the following proof on Youtube and would be very grateful if someone could just take a peak at it and say if it looks legit or not.
> Theorem: Let $X$ be a normed space over $K$, and $f$ be a nonzero linear functional on $X$. If $E$ is an open subset of $X$, then $f(E)$ is an open subset of $K$.
> Proof: Since $f$ is nonzero, there is some $a \in X$ such that $f(a)=1$.
> [Existence of $a$: $\exists y \neq 0$ in $X$ such that $f(y)=p \neq 0 \implies f\left(\frac{y}{p}\right)=1$. Let $a=\frac{y}{p} \in X$ ].
> Note that $a \neq 0$. Let $x \in E$. Since $E$ is open, there is some $r>0$ such that $B(x, r) \subset E$. If $|k|<\frac{r}{\|a\|}$, then $x-k a \in E$, since $\|x-(x-k a)\|=\|k a\|=|k|\| a \|<r$. Thus $f(x)-k=f(x)-k f(a)=f(x-k a) \in f(E)$. And hence $\left\{k^{\prime} \in K:\left|f(x)-k^{\prime}\right|<\frac{r}{\|a\|}\right\} \subset f(E)$.
> In other words, $B\left(f(x),\frac{r}{\|a\|}\right)\subset f(E)$, which implies $E$ is open.
that proof looks good, but this isn't really the open mapping theorem now, is it?
yeah, it's something softer :)
thanks for taking a look at it though. I rarely look for proofs on Youtube, so always good to have it double checked.
12:09
@DanielDonnelly ah to attack the sieve idea of twins ? or ?
12:48
@AlessandroCodenotti thanks
 
1 hour later…
14:00
@AlessandroCodenotti Do you know Four Poles theorem?
@Jakobian never heard of it
I've seen someone claiming you can use it to prove that Borel image of Polish space has countable tightness
but I want to consider separable metric spaces instead, so I'm trying to figure out how they did it, and what could modifications be
Suppose $I\subseteq \mathcal{P}(X)$ is a proper $\sigma$-ideal of Polish space $X$ with Borel basis. Let $\mathcal{A}\subseteq I$ be a point-finite cover of $X$. Then there is $\mathcal{B}\subseteq\mathcal{A}$ such that $\bigcup \mathcal{B}\not\in\sigma(I\cup \mathcal{B}(X))$, the $\sigma$-field generated by $I\cup \mathcal{B}(X)$.
If this were true, then I could prove that under proper forcing axiom, if $f:X\to Y$ is a map such that $f^n:X^n\to Y^n$ are Borel and $X$ is a separable metric space, then $Y$ is hereditarily separable
The assumption on $X$ can be dropped a little from Polish space to an analytic set, but that's still not a lot
14:45
I have a domain $D$ in which $f(z)$ is regular. $\gamma$ is a simple closed curve lying in $D$ and surrounding a point $\zeta \in D$. To show that $$f'(\zeta) =1/{2\pi i}\oint_{\gamma} \frac{f(z)dz}{(z-\zeta)^2}, $$ The author arrives at the requested form, plus an additional term $I$. I need to prove that $$\vert I \vert \to 0 \text{as } |h| \to 0$$ (the author assures me it does :P); where $$I = \frac{1}{2\pi i}\oint_{\gamma}\frac{hf(z)dz}{(z-\zeta)^2(z-\zeta -h)}$$
Now I can an upper bound for the numerator using the fact that $\vert \oint_\gamma f(z)dz\vert \le Ml_{\gamma}$
now I'd like to find a lower bound for the denominator, and I do not know how to do that, I have very little experience with proofs like this in general
Dang, I feel more and more ashamed for asking this :P
15:12
@AlessandroCodenotti Another way, do you see if given a Borel map $f:X\to Y$ from separable metric space $X$ to $T_3$ space $Y$ (or $T_{3.5}$ if you want) could be extended to a map $\tilde f:\tilde X\to \tilde Y$ where $\tilde X$ is Polish and $\tilde Y$ is $T_3$?
and $X\subseteq \tilde X, Y\subseteq \tilde Y$
 
2 hours later…
17:33
Just noticed something neat while reading some stuff --- I saw $re^{i\theta} \mapsto \frac{r}{1+r}e^{i\theta}$ given as an example of a homeomorphism $\Bbb C \to $ the open unit disk, and I realized that, restricted to the positive real line, this is just the relationship between interest rate and rate of discount in compound interest!
hi
17:45
@Fargle This is the standard homeo from $\Bbb R_+$ to $[0,1)$.
I figure --- I just didn't realize that it showed up in the context of interest/discount.
It’s the natural formula to turn $\infty$ into $1$.
I don't disagree. Just had never seen it from this angle before, and it strikes me that it could be used as a "concrete" way to introduce that map as a motivating example of a homeomorphism, for those inclined to think in terms of money.
@Fargle Hah, that's pretty funny!
Are you suggesting that math majors would ever be inclined to think in terms of money?
17:56
@TedShifrin You've got me there.
But I dunno, sometimes I find myself infodumping upon unsuspecting bystanders in my life. I am sure they love that.
I'm sure they're no longer so unsuspecting.
@TedShifrin hi ted!
hi @Stan
how r u? :)
I don't think that whoever came up with this thought of it as compound interest
17:59
We had three power outages in the area last night, so I'm trying to do some bookkeeping on my computer ... :)
@TedShifrin you're advice was great! i was able to figure out the equation myself with just that piece of advice!
Of course not, @Jakobian.
@TedShifrin so thanks!
Ah, good to hear, @Stan. Yeah, the answers you got were either wrong or worthless.
If you have a metric $d$ then you also make it bounded by letting $\frac{d}{1+d}$. Its just one of those natural ways of making something bounded
18:00
You should write up an answer to your question.
@Jakobian The most natural way is the boring $\min\{1, d\}$
@TedShifrin I will as soon as I finish. I first need to find an equation of the circle in a custom plane. Stuck on that part.
@Jakobian I guess what I mean is that the interest-discount case is just a special case of demanding such a bound --- an arbitrary nonnegative interest rate makes sense, but discount rates are only sensible below 100%
@Stan What do you mean by "an equation"?
@BalarkaSen In an analysis class, I had a moment bounded metric had to be used as $\frac{d}{1+d}$ for an argument to work
18:02
And they furthermore are exactly related by that formula rather than the min function or arctan, or whichever other you like
@TedShifrin let me get a picture and show u
@Fargle Well, that's sorta silly. Of course, a ratio is going to be a ratio and not a min or an arctan.
the transformation $r\mapsto \frac{r}{1+r}$ is more natural from analysis perspective I suppose
Seeing it's a metric is a bit easier with the min, though, @Jakobian.
18:05
Cool picture, @Stan, but it doesn't answer my question :)
@TedShifrin ofc, give me a second to type what i mean
Reminds me of the double bubble theorem
I usually just write $\min(d, 1)$ myself too, but $\frac{d}{1+d}$ does seem a lot more useful. For one, as noticed, $r\mapsto \frac{r}{1+r}$ is actually a homeomorphism so I'd expect it to change the balls in a nicer way
@BalarkaSen Indeed.
Just a quick doubt to see if there's a mistake in my book: I have two points $z_1,z_2$ in the complex plane, and a circle $C$ of center $z_1$ and I require that the radius of $C$ be $\rho \ge 2|z_1-z_2|$. if $z$ lies on the circle, then it's impossible to have $|z-z_2| = 1/2\rho$, isn't it?
18:09
You know that $|z-z_2|\ge \rho-|z_1-z_2|$.
@TedShifrin So I currently have paramterized this circle such that I can in vector form specify any point I want on it with some angle $\theta$. This is great because when I put it into a 3D plotting tool, I can spin $\theta$ and it will move the point around in the circle specified.

The problem is, I also want to plot the circle itself. So in a standard 2D plotting tool, I would just plot a circle like $(x-a)^2 + (y-b)^2 = r^2$, but that won't work here because this circle is in 3D dimensions.
Parametric plots are by far easier than plots of equations. I'm confused.
@TedShifrin I don't mean that it's incredible, just that, whereas the example I always held in my head of such a homeo was arctan for some reason, $\frac{d}{1+d}$ is a very much simpler one, and it falls out of a common real-world interaction.
Yeah, @Fargle, I've almost never used arctan :P
@TedShifrin that's what my intuition told me but then $|z-z_2| = |z-z_1+z_1-z_2| \le |z-z_1|+|z_1-z_2| \le \rho +1/2\rho$
18:11
@TedShifrin I'm probably just not understanding. To me $\mathbf{x}$ is just a single point. It's not a set. So I'm having trouble envisioning how it will end up looking like a circle like the one in my image. to me, $\mathbf{x}$ would just be a point on that circle right?
@TedShifrin I was surprised to hear that Michael Hutchings of contact homology fame was one of the people who co-wrote the proof of double bubble.
@Claudio That's not helpful. You need to use what's called the reverse triangle inequality.
balarka: he's double trouble
@Balarka I didn't know that. I wonder if he was in one of Frank Morgan's summer research groups as a youngster.
Yeah I think so
18:12
@TedShifrin I see, thanks for the help
I remember reading about that
@Fargle What is $\mathbf x$?
@TedShifrin Great question. @Stan? ;)
Oops. Sorry, Fargle.
@Stan, what is $\mathbf x$?
@TedShifrin @Fargle LOL Oh i thought i defined it above. It's a point that lies on the circle in my particular unique plane. This was created with the orthonormal basis ted said I would need
18:15
But you're giving equations $\mathbf x=\mathbf x(\theta)$, where $\theta$ is the parameter.
Any decent graphics CAS will do a 3D plot of that.
You don't want to have it do an implicit plot of a sphere and a plane. Computers can't plot intersections just by themselves, as far as I know. My years of using Mathematica I've always had to figure out the parametric equations if I want that.
In particular, with $\min(1, d)$ we lose, say $B(x, 2)$, but with $\frac{d}{1+d}$ the set of balls is still the same
so this should be useful if you don't consider only the more local structure
@Jakobian You're beating a dead horse.
Just let it go.
@TedShifrin if im understanding correctly, then exactly. I need to figure out that intersection. as i understand it, $\mathbf x(\theta)$ is not the parametric equation of the intersection right?
What else would it be, @Stan? You have the data for that. You know the normal vector to the plane and (by Pythagoras, I presume), you know the radius of the circle.
@TedShifrin thinking...trying to reason lol give me a minute
18:22
An interesting question is, if given a metric $d$, can we obtain a uniformly equivalent metric $d'$ such that $d'$-bounded sets coincide with sets bounded with respect to the uniformity generated by $d$
@TedShifrin LOL ofc ur right. I guess I was going in circles you might say....ba dum tsk
I guess I just didn't understand the phrase parametric equation very well
I think this is related to Heine-Borel
@Stan Tsk tsk. Surely you had that in your multivariable calculus course years ago. If not, you can watch a few minutes of one of my videos for a refresher :P
Anyhow, you got it now?
yes, i believe so.
@TedShifrin i was just thinking the other day i better do that
don't want to get even more rusty than i am now
@TedShifrin I'm just drawing inspirations
18:27
@TedShifrin I was walking down the street the other day and realized i'd been being silly and making a 3D version of my thesis model was trivial so i've been trying to work out how to do the equations the last couple days
That's a good exercise, doubtless.
Is this an error in the naive set-theoretic definition of a product of sets?
@TedShifrin I've been tutoring my friend in math cuz he just resumed school again. never finished college and wants to try again. he said "do you ever need help?" and I said to him, "all of us need help. Every time I get stuck, I have to go ask my friend Ted." :')
This from Wikipedia I follow:
LOL @Stan.
18:29
But my first picture doesn't seem to "mix" $X$ and $Y$ so I'm not sure how it works out.
@EE18 error?
$\mathcal P(\mathcal P(X)\cup\mathcal P(Y))$ surely is a mouthful. It's too much for me.
That is, I can't follow how $\{x,\{x,y\}\}$ us a member of the set so constructed
Oh, do we really need to think of ordered pairs that way? I sure don't want to.
Indeed I can't see how I get anything "mixing" $x,y$ in said set, if that makes sense?
18:32
So you're confused about $\{x, \{x, y\}\}\in \mathcal{P}(\mathcal{P}(X)\cup\mathcal{P}(Y))$?
Definitely not, but when passing through something in a book which I fail to follow I do usually try to stop ;)
Exactly :) @Jakobian
@TedShifrin ok so separate question. So i understand that if i have the normal vector $\mathbf n$ to a plane and I decide to choose an arbitrary vector $\mathbf u$ in my plane, then its trivial to find an orthogonal vector $\mathbf v$ that can span 3-space as well as with $\mathbf u$ and $\mathbf v$ together, they can span my plane.

any suggestions for how to choose $\mathbf u$?
@EE18 first thing means that $\{x, \{x, y\}\}\subseteq \mathcal{P}(X)\cup \mathcal{P}(Y)$
We have $x \in X$, $y \in Y$ to begin. Then $\{x\} \in P(X)$ and $\{y\} \in P(Y)$, and thus both $\{x\}, \{y\} \in P(X) \cup P(Y)$.
I gave you my suggestion. You have to read off a solution from the linear equation $\mathbf n\cdot\mathbf x=0$. The basic linear algebra algorithm given a reduced echelon form of a matrix gives you an algorithm for that
18:34
@EE18 oh okay this is an error
it should be $\mathcal{P}(\mathcal{P}(X\cup Y))$
the order of operations is wrong
@EE18 Yeah --- with this definition, where you just define $p = \{\{x\},\{y\}\}$, the sets $X \times Y$ and $Y \times X$ are literally identical, but you would like them not to be the same set.
Agreed I think :) and that's what wikipedia says too! Zorich is killing me... thanks very much for confirming Jakobian!
thank you too Fargle!
I wasn't sure if it worked out as another "model" for ordered pairs but seems it's just flat wrong
Then we get $\{\{x\}, \{x, y\}\}\subseteq \mathcal{P}(X\cup Y)$, that is $\{x\}, \{x, y\} \in \mathcal{P}(X\cup Y)$
It seems like Zorich doesn't really have the patience to do this boring foundational stuff correctly.
It does work as a model for unordered pairs at least
18:38
@TedShifrin excellent! thank you!
in other words, $\{x\}, \{x, y\}\subseteq X\cup Y$, that is $x, y\in X\cup Y$
@Fargle touche :)
@Stan Anyhow, unless one of $n_1$ and $n_2$ is zero, just use $(-n_2,n_1,0)$.
(Sort of a goofy model though. The set $\{x, y\}$ would work just as well >_>)
Ya I'm gonna stay with him because all of the reviews are rave. Trying to use it to give my book Amann Escher a little more context too, but am always grateful I can ask you all some questions :) thanks again everyone!
18:40
@TedShifrin $n_1$ and $n_2$ won't be fixed. and at the moment, i'm not sure what values they are restricted to. but maybe i'll just try that and if i get errors in my plots, then i'll figure out what to do
Of course they're not fixed.
Also the axioms used here, is the axiom of union for $X\cup Y$ being a set, axiom of power set for $\mathcal{P}(\mathcal{P}(X\cup Y))$ being a set, and axiom schema of comprehension for $X\times Y$ being a set
Just think about the equation $\mathbf n\cdot\mathbf x = 0$.
is comprehension also referred to as specification sometimes (i think that's what Halmos calls it)?
also axiom of extensionality is used for set-builder notation
18:41
basically you can choose a subset of a given set with some property
alternatively to axiom of power set, you can use axiom schema of replacement here
@TedShifrin well, $\mathbf x$ lies in my plane and my plane is perpendicular to $\mathbf n$. is that relevant?
oh and of course axiom of pairing for definition of order pair to make sense
@StanShunpike You have forgotten everything? What is dot product? Of course it’s relevant.
Jakobian this closes to just listing out all the axioms
18:55
@EE18 yes
@TedShifrin the dot product is a measure of basically how close the vectors are. when the dot product equals 0, they are orthogonal.
if the parametric definition of the circle is done correctly, ensuring that the circle's center and its radius are defined with respect to my plane, then any point $\mathbf{x}$ generated by this parametric equation will inherently satisfy the plane's equation. This means that the constraint $\mathbf{n} \cdot (\mathbf{x} - \mathbf{p}) = 0$ would be naturally met for all points on the circle. This constraint would be then a confirmation that the circle indeed lies within the specified plane.
that's what i got out of that
No, I reject your measure of closeness entirely.
@SoumikMukherjee If so then isn't extensionality entirely different and just used to define set equality? @Jakobian
@Thorgott not all of them... just the ones you need to do set theory
Maybe you should go back to my second lecture. Dot product has an algebraic definition and then geometric properties. From the algebraic definition, you easily find a basis for the plane orthogonal to a nonzero vector $\mathbf n$.
18:59
@EE18 extensionality is not a definition of equality

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