[Math] How are basis elements also elements of the topology

general-topology

I read the following definitions in Munkres' Topology (2nd Edition):

If $X$ is a set, a basis for a topology on $X$ is a collection
$\mathcal B$ of subsets of $X$ (called basis elements) such that

  1. For each $x\in X$, there is at least one basis element $B$ containing $x$.
  2. If $x$ belongs to the intersection of two basis elements $B_1$ and $B_2$, then there is a basis element $B_3$ containing $x$ such that
    $B_3\subset B_1\cap B_2$.

If $\mathcal B$ satisfies these two conditions, then we define the
topology $\mathcal T$ generated by $\mathcal B$ as follows: A subset
$U$ of $X$ is said to be open in $X$ (that is, to be an element of
$\mathcal T$) if for each $x\in U$, there is a basis element
$B\in\mathcal B$ such that $x\in B$ and $B\subset U$. Note that each
basis element is itself an element of $\mathcal T$.

From this, I am having difficulties understanding how the last sentence follows. Could someone please point me in the right direction?

Best Answer

Just expanding on Daniel Fischer's comment a bit:

From the definition of an open set from a basis, we have:

A subset $U$ of $X$ is said to be open iff for each $x\in U$, there is a basis element $B\in\mathcal B$ such that $x\in B\subseteq U$.

So consider this:

Take a $B \in \mathcal{B}$ and further let $x\in B$.

There exists a basis element, namely $B$, such that:

$x \in B \subseteq B$,

and hence $B$ is open.