So I am given a continuous function mapping a connected domain to the reals, i.e f:(a, b) rightarrow R. I want to show that if f is not strictly monotone and f is continuous, we have x, y, z in (a,b) with x<y<z such that: f(x) leq f(y) and f(y) geq f(z) or f(x) geq f(y) and f(y) leq f(z).

Jared Lowe

Jared Lowe

Answered question

2022-11-16

Negation of monotonicity of a continuous function
So I am given a continuous function mapping a connected domain to the reals, i.e f : ( a , b ) R .
I want to show that if f is not strictly monotone and f is continuous, we have x , y , z ( a , b ) with x < y < z such that:
f ( x ) f ( y )  and  f ( y ) f ( z )
or f ( x ) f ( y )  and  f ( y ) f ( z )
As for what I've tried, using the negation of strictly monotone, we have that f must be increasing and decreasing in two intervals [ x 1 , x 2 ] and [ x 3 , x 4 ] i.e.:
f ( x 1 ) f ( x 2 )  and  f ( x 3 ) f ( x 4 ) or f ( x 1 ) f ( x 2 )  and  f ( x 3 ) f ( x 4 )
The problem comes when I look to combine the two into a single inequality. In an effort to combine these, the only way I see of doing it (directly) would be casewise. If anyone could provide a hint or (less preferred) a complete direct proof I would appreciate it.

Answer & Explanation

Izabella Henson

Izabella Henson

Beginner2022-11-17Added 20 answers

Explanation:
Use proof by contradiction. If your statement is false, then for every x < y < z, we have f ( x ) > f ( y )  or  f ( y ) < f ( z ) and f ( x ) < f ( y )  or  f ( y ) > f ( z ) .

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