I am not familiar with "increasing at a point". I know that f(x) = x^3 is increasing on the whole real line, but since f'(0)=0 do some people say that it is not increasing at x = 0?

1 Answer
Nov 23, 2015

There is potential for confusion with this term.

Explanation:

"increasing at a point" could refer to "monotonicity", in which case we would define "increasing at a point" as follows:

f is increasing at a point x = c if and only if EE delta > 0 :

f(x) < f(c) AA x in (c - delta, c)

and

f(x) > f(c) AA x in (c, c + delta)

The function f(x) = x^3 passes this test at x=0.

On the other hand, a "stationary point" of a function f is a point where its derivative is 0, that is:

lim_(x->c) (f(x)-f(c))/(x-c) = 0

So we might prefer to define "increasing at a point" as having a strictly positive derivative at that point.

If we use the "montonicity" definition, then we are left with the counter-intuitive situation that f(x) = x^3 is "stationary" but "increasing" at x=0.

I think it is not a well defined term.