Continuity & Extreme Values
We follow the idea of the proof in Section 1 for a real function on a real interval
. Coding our proof in terms of real functions.
There is a real function so that for each natural number
the maximum of the values
for
,
and
occurs at
. We can express this in terms of real functions using a real function indicating whether a real number is a natural number,
The maximum of the partition can be described by
( &
) ⇒
We want to extend this function to unlimited "hypernatural" numbers. The greatest integer function satisfies,
,
. The unlimited number
, for
gives an unlimited
with
and
( &
) ⇒
When the natural extension of the indicator function satisfies , we say that
is a hyperinteger. (Every limited hyperinteger is an ordinary positive integer. As you can show with these functions.)
There is a greatest partition point of any number in ,
with
&
and
. When we take the unlimited hypernatural number
we have
and
a partition point in the sense that (
&
), so we have
Let , the standard part. Since
,
. Continuity of the function in the sense
⇒
gives
, so
for any real
in
.
For more details see p.50.
Created by Mathematica (September 22, 2004)