Hello Ron,
Here goes my first post to you. First of all, I am sorry in case I have violated, any guidelines for posting question in general math questions category. Finally, I have realized that inequalities with absolute values give me jitters and I am still trying my best to get better at solving inequalities. I saw this question on a forum other day, and tried to solve it. I got it wrong, but the authors reply was not convincing either so I thought of coming to you for a better explanation. Some people commented that it is a OG question, but I did not really find it in OG12. So, Here it goes:
Is a > 0 ?
(1) a^3 - a < 0
(2) 1 - a^2 > 0
This is how I approached this problem. Please explain where I made mistake and where I am lacking in my concept of inequalities related to this problem.
Stat 1:
(a^3-a)<0
a(a^2-1)<0
a<0 or (a^2-1)<0
a<0 or a^2<1
a<0; -1<a<1
Since a can be both -ve and +ve : Not sufficient.
Stat 2:
1 - a^2 > 0
multiply both sides with -1.
(a^2-1)<0
a^2<1
-1<a<1
Since a can be both -ve and +ve : Not sufficient.
Combining 1 and 2
-1<a<1
Since a can still be both -ve and +ve : Not sufficient.
Answer E!
The author closed in on C as the correct answer, but couple of people comments as D to be correct answer. I know I am lacking few nuances about the inequalities. Please recommend how to get strong on them?