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From http://www.math.niu.edu/~beachy/abstract_algebra/study_guide/11.html, it says

Theorem 1.1.4. Let I be a nonempty set of integers that is closed under addition and subtraction. Then I either consists of zero alone or else contains a smallest positive element, in which case I consists of all multiples of its smallest positive element.

What exactly does it say? Is this the well-ordering theorem?

Don Larynx
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1 Answers1

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One interpretation, in terms of abstract algebra, is that every subgroup of a cyclic group is cyclic, and $I$ is a subgroup of the cyclic group of integers with the group operation of addition. The rest of the statement is just characterizing what a generator of the cyclic subgroup $I$ looks like, when the generator is restricted to be positive (because if $I$ is not the trivial subgroup, you will have one positive and one negative generator, which are additive inverses of each other).

user2566092
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  • We have not reached that yet in class, and I found these notes from a different university. Is there a simpler explanation for it? – Don Larynx Sep 03 '13 at 19:21