The term postulate, or axiom, indicates a statement or assumption that is agreed by everyone to be so obvious or self-evident that no proof is necessary; and which can be used to prove other statements or theorems. Neither axioms nor postulates can be proved (within a system) using more basic statements. However, in many elementary textbooks, where the student does not have the sophistication to understand a more rigorous approach, many otherwise-provable statements are accepted as postulates to allow further development of the subject.
Although ideally one would construct a mathematical or logical system with no assumed statements, this obviously is not possible. Just as any subject must have a set of specific (undefined) words to whose definition everyone agrees, any mathematical or logical system must start from a set of agreed-upon statements from which all further statements (theorems) can be built. These agreed-upon statements are called axioms and postulates.
The term "axiom" has been applied historically to those statements that are applicable to a variety of fields of knowledge; for example: equivalence properties (reflexive, symmetric, and transitive); properties of equality and inequality (addition, subtraction, division, multiplication, and substitution); the whole is equal to the sum of its parts and is greater than any of its parts; etc. The general applicability of these properties to a wide variety of fields is obvious.
On the other hand, postulates apply to one, more specific field of knowledge. Probably the most famous set of postulates is Euclid's five postulates of plane geometry:
==See Also=
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