In 1637 Pierre de Fermat wrote in the margin of
Diophantus’s Arithmetica the statement that would puzzle some
of the world’s greatest mathematicians for over three centuries:
It is impossible to
write a cube as a sum of two cubes, a fourth power as a sum of two fourth
powers, and, in general, any power beyond the second as a sum of two similar
powers. For this, I have discovered a truly wondrous proof, but the margin is
too small to contain it.
Fermat, celebrated for
making such declarations with little confirmation, kept mathematicians
scratching their heads and squaring their roots trying to discover proofs for
his statements. By the 19th century, all of Fermat’s theories
had been resolved except the one above, a statement that became know as Fermat’s
Last Theorem.
We will never know
whether Fermat had actually discovered a correct proof of his theorem, but we
do know that Andrew Wiles of Princeton University produced a 130-page proof in
1994, 357 years after Fermat wrote his tantalizing marginal note.
Although Fermat’s Last
Theorem has not yet been used for practical purposes, many new ideas and
numerous practical technological advances developed in solving the problem.
Sometimes the trip along the way becomes more important than reaching the
end of our journey.
Adopted from The Heart of
Mathematics by Edward B. Burger and Michael Starbird
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