| For example,
Fermat showed that 26 is the only number trapped between
a square and a cube, because 52
= 5´5
= 25 and 33 = 3´3´3
= 27. Fermat was able to use mathematical
logic to prove that no other numbers from zero to infinity
have this property. (If you go below zero, then -1 also
has this property.)
By the way, Fermat lived in
the 17th century near Toulouse in southwest France,
and his day job was as a judge dealing with some of
the nastiest cases imaginable, including the condemnation
of priests to be burned at the stake. Judges were generally
discouraged from socialising within the community in
order to avoid a conflict of interests, so Fermat would
spend his evenings hidden in his study, pursuing his
mathematical interests. He was a truly amateur academic
and E.T. Bell called him the Prince of Amateurs. However,
when Julian Coolidge wrote Mathematics of Great Amateurs,
he excluded Fermat on the grounds that he was ‘so really
great that he should count as a professional.’
It was during one of these
amateur interludes that Fermat created the infamous
Last Theorem. You can find out more about the Last Theorem
in the suitably titled What
is the Last Theorem? section, but in essence Fermat
invented a problem, then solved it, but he never wrote
down the solution. In the margin of a notebook he scribbled:
"I have a
truly marvellous demonstration of this proposition
which this margin is too narrow to contain..."
This was typical of Fermat.
He was a mischievous mathematician, who was forever
tormenting his rivals. René Descartes called Fermat
‘a braggart’ and the English mathematician John Wallis
called him ‘that damned Frenchman’.
Fermat wrote several other
notes, saying things like 'I can prove such and such
but I have to feed the cat', or 'I can solve a particular
equation but I have to wash my hair', and all of these
notes were discovered after his death. Mathematicians
across Europe studied Fermat’s observations and attempted
to rediscover the proofs behind the theorems. Over the
course of the next century, each theorem was proved,
except for the one, which would become known as Fermat’s
Last Theorem.
You can find out more about
Pierre de Fermat by visiting the excellent
History of Mathematics website. This
site will also tell you more about the other mathematicians
mentioned on this page, including Blaise Pascal.
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