Fixed-point property is retract-hereditary

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This article gives the statement, and possibly proof, of a topological space property (i.e., fixed-point property) satisfying a topological space metaproperty (i.e., retract-hereditary property of topological spaces)
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Statement

Property-theoretic statement

The property of topological spaces called the fixed-point property is a retract-hereditary property of topological spaces.

Verbal statement

Any retract of a topological space having the fixed-point property, also has the fixed-point property.

Definitions used

Fixed-point property

Retract

Subspace topology

Proof

Proof outline

  • Consider a self-map of the retract
  • Compose with the retraction to get a self-map of the whole space
  • Find a fixed point, and observe that it must be a fixed point of the original self-map

Proof details

Given: A topological space X satisfying the fixed-point property, a retraction r:XA where AX and r(a)=a for all aA

To prove: A satisfies the fixed-point property

Proof: Let i denote the inclusion of A in X.

Consider any continuous map f:AA. We need to show that f has a fixed point in A. Consider the composition g=ifr. This is a map from X to X that first retracts to A, then applies f, and then views the resulting point of A as a point in X. g is a composite of continuous maps, so g is continuous. Since X has the fixed-point property, there exists xX such that g(x)=x.

But by construction, g(x) is actually inside A, so in fact xA. But if xA, r(x)=x, so we conclude that x=g(x)=f(r(x))=f(x). Thus, xA is a fixed point of f, completing the proof.