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First off, I'll explain what axioms are since they are of fundamental importance to abstract algebra and math in general. In mathematical logic, an axiom is an underivable, unprovable statement that is accepted to be truth. Axioms are, therefore, statements which form the mathematical basis from which all other theorems can be derived. The most well-known modern examples of mathematical axioms are those of the axiomatic set theory known as ZFC.

The Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory with the axiom of choice added to it, abbreviated ZFC, is the axiomatic set theory which provides our basis for math. There are nine axioms in the theory:

1) Two sets are equal if and only if they have the exact same members.

2) A set can't be an element of itself.

3) If there is a property that is characteristic of the elements of a set, a subset of that set exists containing the elements that satisfy the property.

4) A set exists containing exactly all of the members of two given sets.

5) A set exists whose elements are the members of the members (the union) of a given set.

6) The image of any function on a set is also a set.

7) There is a set that contains all of the natural numbers.

8) Every set has a power set; i.e. the set of all possible subsets of the original set.

9) Every set can be well-ordered such that every subset of the set has a "least" element under the ordering.

All nit-picking aside, these nine axioms are mathematically unprovable and therefore must be assumed true for mathematics to work.

A conjecture, as opposed to an axiom, is an unproved (not unprovable) statement that is also generally accepted to be true. The subtle difference between the two terms is basically that an axiom has been proven to be unprovable, whereas a conjecture hasn't.

See the related link for more information about ZFC.

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Q: What is the difference between a conjecture and an axiom?
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Related questions

What is the difference between and axiom and a postulate?

There is no difference - synonymous.


What is the difference between an axiom and a theorem?

An axiom is a self-evident statement that is assumed to be true. A theorem is proved to be true.


What is the difference between axiom and property in algebra?

properties are based on axioms


What is the difference between a hypothesis and a conjecture?

The difference between a hypothesis and a conjecture is that a hypothesis is something investigated or accepted as highly probable in the light established facts and a conjecture is the formation or expression of an opinion or theory without sufficient evidence for proof.


What is the difference between axiom and theorem?

The axioms are the initial assumptions. The theorems are derived, by logical reasoning, from the axioms - or from other, previously derived, theorems.


Are there any similarities between a theorem and an axiom?

A theorem is a proved rule but an axiom cannot be proven but is stated to be true.


What conjecture can you make about the relationship between multiplying decimals and whole numbers?

You can make whatever conjecture that you want: it does not have to be true or even logical. You could conjecture that the relationship is like the one between the Sun and the Earth!


What are the kinds of axioms?

An Axiom is a mathematical statement that is assumed to be true. There are five basic axioms of algebra. The axioms are the reflexive axiom, symmetric axiom, transitive axiom, additive axiom and multiplicative axiom.


What is an axiom system?

An axiom system is a set of axioms or axiom schemata from which theorems can be derived.


We call this as the axiom?

No, it is a meaningless sentence, not an axiom.


Can I use axiom in a sentence?

Of course! Here's an example sentence: "In mathematics, an axiom is a statement that is accepted as true without requiring proof."


What is the relationship between a conjecture a theorem and a two column proof?

joe