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11 points
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3 points

prove it then.

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0 points
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1 point
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Only works for a smooth curve with a neighbourhood around it. I think you need the transverse regular theorem or something.

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6 points

This isn’t a rigorous mathematic proof that would prove that it holds true in every case. You aren’t wrong, but this is a colloquial definition of proof, not a mathematical proof.

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7 points

It’s fucking obvious!

Seriously, I once had to prove that mulplying a value by a number between 0 and 1 decreased it’s original value, i.e. effectively defining the unary, which should be an axiom.

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3 points
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So you need to proof x•c < x for 0<=c<1?

Isn’t that just:

xc < x | ÷x

c < x/x (for x=/=0)

c < 1 q.e.d.

What am I missing?

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5 points

Mathematicians like to have as little axioms as possible because any axiom is essentially an assumption that can be wrong.

Also proving elementary results like your example with as little tools as possible is a great exercise to learn mathematical deduction and to understand the relation between certain elementary mathematical properties.

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3 points

It can’t be an axiom if it can be defined by other axioms. An axiom can not be formally proven

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