2.5 KiB
2.5 KiB
MIT 6.1200J Lecture 01: Predicates, Sets, and Proofs
Date: Tuesday, February 6, 2024
Instructors: Z. Abel, B. Chapman, E. Demaine
Course Administration
- Lectures Tu/Th
- Recitations W/F (attendance counts 10%)
- Problem Sets due Mondays, released Tuesdays
- Collaboration Policy: Solve in groups, list collaborators, write solutions independently (no looking at others' work or using communal notes while writing)
- Late Policy: n hours late = 100 - n% of points (min 50%)
Key Concepts
What is a Proof?
Definition: A mathematical proof is a verification of a proposition by a chain of logical deductions from a base set of axioms.
Propositions and Predicates
- Proposition: A statement that is either True or False
- Example (True): 2 + 3 = 5
- Example (False): 2 + 3 = 6
- Predicate: A proposition whose truth depends on variables
- Example: ∀n ∈ ℕ. n² + n + 41 is prime
Sets (Introduction)
- Set: A collection of objects (no duplicates, order doesn't matter)
- Notation:
- ∈ (element of): 6 ∈ A
- ⊆ (subset): S ⊆ T means all elements of S are in T
- Set-builder notation: {n ∈ ℕ | isPrime(n)} = {2, 3, 5, 7, 11, ...}
- Operations:
- ∩ (intersection): A ∩ B
- ∪ (union): A ∪ B
- \ (difference): A \ B
- Ordered Tuples: (a, b) where order matters and duplicates allowed
Common Sets:
- ℕ = {0, 1, 2, ...} (natural numbers)
- ℤ = {..., -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, ...} (integers)
- ∅ or {} (empty set)
Axioms
Definition: An axiom is a proposition assumed to be True. Must be stated upfront.
Key Point: Different axiom systems can be equally valid but yield different results.
Example Axioms:
- If a = b and b = c, then a = c
- Euclidean: Given line l and point p ∉ l, exactly one line through p parallel to l
- Hyperbolic: Given line l and point p ∉ l, infinitely many lines through p parallel to l
- Spherical: Given line l and point p ∉ l, no line through p parallel to l
Consistency and Completeness
- Consistent: No proposition can be both proved and disproved
- Complete: Every proposition can be either proved or disproved
Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem (1930s): No set of axioms is both complete and consistent.
Corollary: If axioms are consistent, there exist true statements that cannot be proved.
Important Note
- Understanding someone else's proof ≠ being able to piece your own proof together
- "In your own words" means: show your reasoning process