"Stan Brown" <
the_sta...@fastmail.fm> wrote in message
news:MPG.2ba6c1d71...@news.individual.net...
> On Sun, 10 Mar 2013 15:48:52 -0000, Jack wrote:
>>
>> I am trying to say the following, in formal terms:
>>
>> " Any two functions, each of whose graph curve is exclusively convex*,
>> intersect at most twice".
>>
>> * meaning that the curve starts off steep then gradually becomes flatter,
>> at
>> no point violating this trend.
>
> I don't know "convex" as you are using it. Isn't the real issue that
> the first derivative is either monotonically increasing but never
> positive, or monotonically decreasing but never negative?
>
I can't very well speak derivative-speak. By 'convex' or 'concave' I mean
that no two points on the curve have the same gradient.
What I am trying to say is that both curves follow a gradient that decreases
at a steadily decreasing rate; and for any x<y, the d(f(x))/d(f(y)) <
d(g(x))/d(g(y)), where d is the function denoting the gradient.
What do you think the best way to prove it would be? I would rather not use
calcukus, if that's possible.
>> BTW I take it this is an identity that doesn't need a proof...?
>
> It _seems_ right (if I understand your language), but even if it is I
> think it would need to be proved.
>
> (It wouldn't be an identity in any case. An identity is an equation
> that is true for all values of the variables, like (x+y)² = x² + 2xy
> + y².
I had imagined it would be OK to use this definition
"An identity is a relation which is tautologically true. This means that
whatever the number or value may be, the answer stays the same"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_%28mathematics%29
-- which looks pretty much the same as definition of the word 'analytic' in
logic.
I think he word you want is "axiom", but I don't think it
> qualifies at that level of obviousness, even if I'm not overlooking a
> counterexample.)
I was once rebuked by a mathematcian for using the word 'axiom' in that
sense. I told him I thought it meant something that is self-evident, and he
said 'well it might have meant that *once*, but not any more! Not in
mathematics!'. My current understanding of the mathematical use of 'axiom'
is that it means an assumption.