Who thinks that Fermat really couldn't prove his Last Theorem, even though he hinted he had so in the margin of one of his papers? Also, has anyone simplified it since it was proven in 1994?
I like to believe he could. Euler had his house searched for the proof. If only they made books with bigger margins.
Apparently there are lots of "proofs" for Fermat's Last
Theorem that look correct but actually have quite subtle flaws.
(I haven't found any of these by the way.) So my guess is that he
thought he'd proved it, but it didn't quite work.
Michael
Well you really can't say because man's mind is most amazing
thing !! But I have serious doubts as to his claims.
The reason is that the present proof is far too complex to be
written out by a single man in a sudden insight.Also it uses so
many things which were really not known in Fermat's time. I
believe that whatever was available to Fermat and add to that all
the insight shown by him in all his work,
the proof known to him, would not be something that a today's
graduate student of maths cannot grasp with a little work. But
you see thousands of minds have devoted themselves to the task of
prooving this theorem over 300 years and still they can't
...
What seems to be a more rational view to me is that he got the
proof for n=3 or perhaps 4 and thought that this would generalize
to higher powers.
He certainly proved it for n = 4 (see the last post in
this
discussion for the proof). Very easy to understand - very
difficult to figure out, as usual.
Michael
Thanks for that!! And as I said..it doesn't generalize...
I have seen a few of the proofs dealing with Fermat' Last
Theorem, and most of them are flawed disproofs. A typical example
involves dividing by zero (diguised cleverly though) to show that
2=1 or something like that. This goes on to show that
zn =yn +xn
=y+x2
which has solutions. Perhaps though there are better "proofs"
that actually halfway work.
Brad