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Proofs like Wiles brilliant solution of the famous Fermat Last Theorem are long and difficult.
FORBES: A Beautiful Sausage
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His page-turning 1997 account of the solution of a mathematical puzzle, Fermat's Enigma, was a bestseller.
FORBES: I've got a secret
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His method relies on some fairly basic mathematics indeed, it uses another of Fermat's theorems, known as Fermat's little theorem.
ECONOMIST: Number theory
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It involves questions like Fermat's Last Theorem and the Riemann Hypothesis.
NPR: The Math Behind Pellicano's Code
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However, the famous Fermat's Last Theorem tells us that if the numbers are not squared but, say, multiplied three times (cubed) then no numbers can be found that will work.
BBC: The secret of squares revealed
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What impact did computers have on solving Fermat's theorem?
FORBES: Simon Singh says
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At Harvard (class of '72) he studied mathematics and he maintains his interest in the world of figures, socializing with math professors and even moderating a discussion about the solution of Fermat's Last Theorem.
FORBES: Polymath scion
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For a comprehensive yet eminently comprehensible account of how cosmologists pieced together the history of the universe, turn to the latest book by Simon Singh, a British science writer best known for his bestselling account of the solution of Fermat's last theorem.
ECONOMIST: The quest to explain the structure of the universe