Final answer:
A subbasis for the discrete topology on an infinite set X that does not include any singleton sets can be constructed by taking the complements of all possible finite subsets of X. Since X is infinite, the complements will not be singletons and their finite intersections can generate all subsets, thereby forming the entire discrete topology.
Step-by-step explanation:
You are asking about constructing a subbasis for a topology, specifically for the discrete topology on an infinite set, where the subbasis does not include any singleton sets. In topology, a subbasis S for a topology τ is a collection of sets whose union equals the entire space X, and the finite intersections of which form a basis for the topology τ.
To devise such a subbasis for the discrete topology on an infinite set X, we can consider the collection of all possible finite complements in X. Since X is infinite, the complement of any finite subset is itself an infinite set, which would satisfy the condition of avoiding singleton sets.
Here's how one might construct such a subbasis:
- Consider all finite subsets F of X.
- For each finite subset F, take the complement in X, denoted as X \ F.
- The collection S of all such complements will serve as the subbasis.
This collection S of complements of finite subsets will indeed form a subbasis, because the discrete topology on X is generated by all subsets, and finite intersections of complements of finite subsets can produce any subset, including singletons, thereby generating the entire discrete topology.