Andrew wiles Memes

Posts tagged with Andrew wiles

First Semester Vs. Fields Medal

First Semester Vs. Fields Medal
The innocent optimism of first-year math students thinking Fermat's Last Theorem is just "a little" challenge versus the soul-crushing reality that destroyed mathematicians for 358 years. Poor Andrew Wiles spent seven years in his attic just to prove what Fermat casually scribbled in a margin. "I have discovered a truly marvelous proof which this margin is too small to contain" — yeah right, Pierre. Next time leave your homework fully completed instead of traumatizing generations of mathematicians.

What A Mathematical Madlad

What A Mathematical Madlad
Pierre de Fermat really woke up one day in 1637, scribbled "I have a truly marvelous proof which this margin is too small to contain," and then chose mathematical chaos. The absolute troll left mathematicians banging their heads against walls for 358 years until Andrew Wiles finally proved it in 1995. Imagine dropping the mathematical equivalent of "I know something you don't know" and then DYING without elaborating. Greatest mic drop in scientific history. Either Fermat was a genius who actually had a proof (doubtful) or he was history's first clickbait artist. "Mathematicians HATE him for this ONE simple theorem!"

The Margin Was Too Small For This Time Paradox

The Margin Was Too Small For This Time Paradox
The ultimate mathematical plot twist! Pierre de Fermat famously wrote in the margin of his copy of Arithmetica that he had a "truly marvelous proof" for his Last Theorem (no three positive integers a, b, and c can satisfy a n + b n = c n for any integer n > 2), but the margin was too small to contain it. Then he DIED without ever writing it down! The proof remained elusive for 358 years until Andrew Wiles finally cracked it in 1994. So imagine poor Fermat's shock if a time traveler popped up while he was just casually scribbling his "I totally have a proof but no room to write it" note, only to inform him that this throwaway comment would torment mathematicians for centuries! His face says it all - from smug confidence to absolute panic in 0.5 seconds. That margin note was the 17th century equivalent of "I know something you don't know" followed by ghosting humanity for three and a half centuries!