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When proving that conditions $A$ and $B$ are equivalent, it is often an arbitrary choice whether to first prove $A\implies B$ or $B\implies A$. Are there examples where the second implication uses the first in a nontrivial way, and becomes significantly more difficult without invoking the former?

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The proof of the Shephard-Todd theorem proceeds exactly that way. The theorem can be stated as:

For a finite subgroup $G\subset GL(n,\mathbb C)$ the following are equivalent:

(A) $G$ is generated by complex reflections (i.e., elements $g$ with $\text{rank}(g-\mathbf1_n)=1$).

(B) The ring of invariants $\mathbb C[x_1,\ldots,x_n]^G$ is a polynomial ring.

First, Shephard-Todd prove $A\Rightarrow B$ by classifying all complex reflection groups and then proceed by inspection (Chevalley found later a conceptual proof of this direction).

To prove $B\Rightarrow A$ let $H\subseteq G$ be the subgroup generated by all complex reflections. From $A\Rightarrow B$ one gets that $\mathbb C[x_1,\ldots,x_n]^H=\mathbb C[y_1,\ldots,y_n]=:P$ is a polynomial ring. By assumption $\mathbb C[x_1,\ldots,x_n]^G=\mathbb C[z_1,\ldots,z_n]=:Q$. The ring extension $P|Q$ is, by construction, unramified in codimension one. On the other hand it is ramified along the zero set of the Jacobian $\det(\partial z_i/\partial y_j)$. So $P=Q$ and therefore $H=G$.

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This is not exactly about an equivalence. But the same question can be raised whether, in an existence and uniqueness theorem, the proof of existence uses proven uniqueness, or the converse. I have one example of both situations:

In elliptic linear PDE, one often apply Lax-Milgram Theorem. The proof of existence does involve the quite obvious uniqueness.

More involved : the KdV equation $u_t+uu_x+u_{xxx}=0$ admits an infinite list of conserved quantities, parametrized by a natural integer (Gardner, Greene, Kruskal & Miura) $$I_n=\int_{-\infty}^{+\infty}\left((d^nu/dx^n)^2+\cdots\right)dx.$$ I proved that the list is complete (there does nt exist other invariants in the form of an integral involving $u$ and finitely many derivatives), and the proof needs the knowledge of the list.

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Lafforgue's proof of the Langlands correspondence over function fields provides an important example.

The Langlands correspondence over a function field can be expressed, roughly, as an "if and only if" statement:

An assignment of conjugacy classes in $GL_n$ to the closed points of an algebraic curve $X$ over a finite field $k$ is the set of Frobenius conjugacy classes of some irreducible $n$-dimensional $\operatorname{Gal}(k(X))$-representation of and only if it is the set of Satake parameters of some cuspidal automorphic form on $GL_n(k(X))$.

L. Lafforgue proved both directions of this. He proved the "if" direction directly, by a geometric argument involving the moduli space of shtukas, building on work of Drinfeld and others. He deduced the "only if" direction from the "if" direction for smaller $n$ via the converse theorem.

V. Lafforgue generalized the "if" to an arbitrary group, but the second part breaks down in the case of a general group as the converse theorem is not available there.

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  • $\begingroup$ I'd probably accept this if it weren't totally over my head :) $\endgroup$ Jul 10, 2017 at 17:09
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This is perhaps overly elementary since it is something that might appear in an undergraduate course, but it's what came immediately to my mind.

For $\Omega \subseteq \mathbb{C}$ simply connected and open, a continuous function $f\colon \Omega \to \mathbb{C}$ is holomorphic if and only if $$\int_\gamma f(z)\,dz = 0$$ for any closed curve $\gamma$ in $\Omega$.

The forward direction is Cauchy's theorem. As a consequence once obtains the famous integral formula and from that the fact that holomorphic functions are analytic.

The reverse direction is a particular case of Morera's theorem, which can be easily proven as follows: observe that the condition on integrals implies $f$ has an antiderivative, which is necessarily holomorphic and therefore analytic. Since $f$ is the derivative of an analytic function it has a derivative itself.

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I asked about this before on MSE: https://math.stackexchange.com/q/1500691/101420

There are some arguments that Pythagoras theorem and its converse provide an example of what you're asking. (So given a triangle with sides $p, q, r$ lying opposite of corners $P, Q, R$ one would have statement $A$ to be 'angle $R$ is a right angle' and statement $B$ to be $p^2 + q^2 = r^2$.) For a more extensive discussion of this see my answer to my MSE question linked above and links in there.

I am still interested in more examples, though!

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