Induction and Union of Sets I'm trying to prove the following: "Suppose that one has proven the pr

Laurel Yoder

Laurel Yoder

Answered question

2022-05-19

Induction and Union of Sets
I'm trying to prove the following:
"Suppose that one has proven the proposition that if A B and C D, then A C B D. Prove that for any integer n 2 that if sets A 1 , A 2 , . . . , A n and B 1 , B 2 , . . . B n are sets that satisfy A j B j for j = 1 , 2 , . . . , n then
j = 1 n A j j = 1 n B j . "
I'm not sure if I what I came up with makes sense logically, and would appreciate some feedback.
Proof:
Define P(n): j = 1 n A j j = 1 n B j .
Base case ( n = 2 ):
j = 1 2 A j j = 1 2 B j = A 1 A 2 B 1 B 2 . So P(2) holds.
Inductive step: Assume P(k) holds for some k 2. So j = 1 k A j j = 1 k B j = A 1 A 2 . . . A k B 1 B 2 . . . B k .
Notice, j = 1 k + 1 A j j = 1 k + 1 B j = A 1 A 2 . . . A k A k + 1 B 1 B 2 . . . B k B k + 1 .
So P ( k + 1 ) olds and by induction P(n) holds for all n 2.

Answer & Explanation

Alex Baldwin

Alex Baldwin

Beginner2022-05-20Added 4 answers

Step 1
I will continue from inductive step.
Inductive step: Assume P(k), then we want to show it holds for the inductive step P ( k + 1 ):
j = 1 k + 1 A j j = 1 k + 1 B j = ( A 1 A 2 . . . A k ) A k + 1 ( B 1 B 2 . . . B k ) B k + 1 .
You can then consider the two paraenthsized groups as one group and thus you can consider them as 2 elements similar to how you did with base case, which will give you final result.

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