Difference between revisions of "Maximum"

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Revision as of 20:15, 3 November 2006

Given an ordered set $S$, the maximum element of $S$, if it exists, is some $M \in S$ such that for all $n \in S$, $n \leq M$.

For example, the maximum element of the set $S_1 = \{0, e, \pi, 4\}$ of real numbers is $4$, since it is larger than every other element of the set.

Every finite set has a maximum. However, many infinite sets do not. The integers, $\mathbb Z$ have no maximum, since for any $n \in \mathbb Z$ we can find $m \in \mathbb Z$ such that $m > n$. (Taking $m = n + 1$ works nicely.)

A more subtle example of this phenomenon is the set $K = \{0, \frac 12, \frac 23, \frac 34, \frac 45, \ldots\} = \{1 - \frac 1n \mid n \in \mathbb{Z}_{> 0}\}$. While this set has a least upper bound 1, it has no maximum.


The previous example suggests the following formulation: if $S$ is a set contained in some larger ordered set $R$ with the least upper bound property, then $S$ has a maximum if and only if the least upper bound of $S$ is a member of $S$. This article is a stub. Help us out by expanding it.