Reflexive relation

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Template:Aye indicates that the column's property is always true for the row's term (at the very left), while Template:N& indicates that the property is not guaranteed in general (it might, or might not, hold). For example, that every equivalence relation is symmetric, but not necessarily antisymmetric, is indicated by Template:Aye in the "Symmetric" column and Template:N& in the "Antisymmetric" column, respectively.

All definitions tacitly require the homogeneous relation R be transitive: for all a,b,c, if aRb and bRc then aRc.
A term's definition may require additional properties that are not listed in this table.

In mathematics, a binary relation R on a set X is reflexive if it relates every element of X to itself.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

An example of a reflexive relation is the relation "is equal to" on the set of real numbers, since every real number is equal to itself. A reflexive relation is said to have the reflexive property or is said to possess reflexivity. Along with symmetry and transitivity, reflexivity is one of three properties defining equivalence relations.

Etymology

Giuseppe Peano's introduction of the reflexive property, along with symmetry and transitivity.

The word reflexive is originally derived from the Medieval Latin reflexivus ('recoiling' [c.f. reflex], or 'directed upon itself') (c. 1250 AD) from the classical Latin reflexus- ('turn away', 'reflection') + -īvus (suffix). The word entered Early Modern English in the 1580s. The sense of the word meaning 'directed upon itself', as now used in mathematics, surviving mostly by its use in philosophy and grammar (c.f. Reflexive verb and Reflexive pronoun).[1][2]

The first explicit use of "reflexivity", that is, describing a relation as having the property that every element is related to itself, is generally attributed to Giuseppe Peano in his Arithmetices principia (1889), wherein he defines one of the fundamental properties of equality being a=a.[3][4] The first use of the word reflexive in the sense of mathematics and logic was by Bertrand Russell in his Principles of Mathematics (1903).[4][5]

Definitions

A relation R on the set X is said to be Template:Em if for every xX, (x,x)R.

Equivalently, letting IX:={(x,x):xX} denote the identity relation on X, the relation R is reflexive if IXR.

The Template:Em of R is the union RIX, which can equivalently be defined as the smallest (with respect to ) reflexive relation on X that is a superset of R. A relation R is reflexive if and only if it is equal to its reflexive closure.

The Template:Em or Template:Em of R is the smallest (with respect to ) relation on X that has the same reflexive closure as R. It is equal to RIX={(x,y)R:xy}. The reflexive reduction of R can, in a sense, be seen as a construction that is the "opposite" of the reflexive closure of R. For example, the reflexive closure of the canonical strict inequality < on the reals is the usual non-strict inequality whereas the reflexive reduction of is <.

There are several definitions related to the reflexive property. The relation R is called:

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[6] if it does not relate any element to itself; that is, if xRx holds for no xX. A relation is irreflexive if and only if its complement in X×X is reflexive. An asymmetric relation is necessarily irreflexive. A transitive and irreflexive relation is necessarily asymmetric.
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if whenever x,yX are such that xRy, then necessarily xRx.[7]
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if whenever x,yX are such that xRy, then necessarily yRy.
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if every element that is part of some relation is related to itself. Explicitly, this means that whenever x,yX are such that xRy, then necessarily xRx and yRy. Equivalently, a binary relation is quasi-reflexive if and only if it is both left quasi-reflexive and right quasi-reflexive. A relation R is quasi-reflexive if and only if its symmetric closure RRT is left (or right) quasi-reflexive.
antisymmetric
if whenever x,yX are such that xRy and yRx, then necessarily x=y.
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if whenever x,yX are such that xRy, then necessarily x=y.Template:Sfn A relation R is coreflexive if and only if its symmetric closure is anti-symmetric.

A reflexive relation on a nonempty set X can neither be irreflexive, nor asymmetric (R is called Template:Em if xRy implies not yRx), nor antitransitive (R is Template:Em if xRy and yRz implies not xRz).

Examples

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Examples of reflexive relations include:

  • "is equal to" (equality)
  • "is a subset of" (set inclusion)
  • "divides" (divisibility)
  • "is greater than or equal to"
  • "is less than or equal to"

Examples of irreflexive relations include:

  • "is not equal to"
  • "is coprime to" on the integers larger than 1
  • "is a proper subset of"
  • "is greater than"
  • "is less than"

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An example of an irreflexive relation, which means that it does not relate any element to itself, is the "greater than" relation (x>y) on the real numbers. Not every relation which is not reflexive is irreflexive; it is possible to define relations where some elements are related to themselves but others are not (that is, neither all nor none are). For example, the binary relation "the product of x and y is even" is reflexive on the set of even numbers, irreflexive on the set of odd numbers, and neither reflexive nor irreflexive on the set of natural numbers.

An example of a quasi-reflexive relation R is "has the same limit as" on the set of sequences of real numbers: not every sequence has a limit, and thus the relation is not reflexive, but if a sequence has the same limit as some sequence, then it has the same limit as itself. An example of a left quasi-reflexive relation is a left Euclidean relation, which is always left quasi-reflexive but not necessarily right quasi-reflexive, and thus not necessarily quasi-reflexive.

An example of a coreflexive relation is the relation on integers in which each odd number is related to itself and there are no other relations. The equality relation is the only example of a both reflexive and coreflexive relation, and any coreflexive relation is a subset of the identity relation. The union of a coreflexive relation and a transitive relation on the same set is always transitive.

Number of reflexive relations

The number of reflexive relations on an n-element set is 2n2n.[8]

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Philosophical logic

Authors in philosophical logic often use different terminology. Reflexive relations in the mathematical sense are called totally reflexive in philosophical logic, and quasi-reflexive relations are called reflexive.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Notes

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References

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  1. Template:Cite web
  2. Oxford English Dictionary, s.v. “Reflexive (adj. & n.), Etymology,” September 2024.
  3. Template:Cite book
  4. 4.0 4.1 Template:Cite journal
  5. Oxford English Dictionary, s.v. “Reflexive (adj.), sense 7 - Mathematics and Logic”, "1903–", September 2024.
  6. This term is due to C S Peirce; see Template:Harvnb. Russell also introduces two equivalent terms to be contained in or imply diversity.
  7. The Encyclopædia Britannica calls this property quasi-reflexivity.
  8. On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences A053763