Bridge to Abstract Mathematics: Mathematical Proof and Structures

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10.1 AN AXlOMATlZATlON FOR THE SYSTEM OF POSITIVE INTEGERS 339

must show that p(q + 1) # 1. Now p(q + 1) = pq + p = p + pq = p +
o(x) = a(p + x), where p + x E N, by additive closure. Hence p(q + 1) E
im (a). Since 1 4 im (a), we conclude 1 # p(q + I), as desired. 0

ORDERING PROPERTIES OF N

We now consider properties of N having to do with the ordering of positive
integers. Our starting point is the following definition.


DEFINITION 3
Let a, b E N. We say that a < b (a is less than b) if and only if there exists c E N
such that a + c = b.

A number of facts related to Definition 3 present themselves immediately.
We collect some of them in the following theorem, whose proof is left to
you in Exercise 5(a).


THEOREM 8
Let a, b, c E N. Then:

(a) a < 4a)
(b) a<a+b
(c) If a < b and b < c, then a < c (transitivity)
(d) If a < b, then a # b
(e) If a # 1, then 1 <a
(f) If a < 6, then there exists a unique x E N such that a + x = b
(g) If a < b, then a + c < b+ c
(h) If a < b, then ac < bc

The uniqueness in part (I) of he or em 8 is suggestive of the subtraction
operation, as defined in Definition 4.


DEFINITION 4
If a, b E N with a < b, we denote by b - a (b minus a) the unique positive integer
x such that a + x = b.

We emphasize-that b - a is defined in N if and only if a < b. We collect
other properties in Theorem 9.


THEOREM 9
Let a, b, c E N with a < b < c. Then:
(a) a+(b-a)=b
(6) (c - b) + a = c - (6 - a)
(c) (c + b) - a = c + (b - a)
(d) c(b - a) = cb - ca
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