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Andrew Wiles
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Andrew Wiles is an English-American mathematician who eventually solved Fermat's Last Theorem. His interest in the problem began at an early age. He said, "I was a ten year old and one day I happened to be looking in my local public library and I found a book on maths and it told a bit about the history of this problem and I, a ten year old, could understand it. From that moment I tried to solve it myself, it was such a challenge, such a beautiful problem, this problem was Fermat's Last Theorem."
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When Cambridge mathematician Andrew Wiles announced a solution for Fermat's last theorem in 1993, it electrified the world of mathematics. After a flaw was discovered in the proof, Wiles had to work for another year--he had already laboured in solitude for seven years--to establish that he had solved the 350-year-old problem. Simon Singh's book is a lively, comprehensible explanation of Wiles's work and of the colourful history that has build up around Fermat's last theorem over the years. The book contains some problems that offer a taste for the maths, but it ... includes limericks to give a feeling for the quirkier side of mathematicians.
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The son of a theologian at Oxford University in England, Andrew Wiles first came across Fermat's last theorem when he was 10 years old and saw it in a book his town's public library. He has forgotten the book's title and author, but he vividly remembers its effect. It made him want to be a mathematician and it made him want to solve the problem.
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Andrew Wiles was born in Cambridge, England in 1953 and attended The Leys School, Cambridge and then earned his BA degree from Merton College, Oxford in 1974 and Ph.D. from Clare College, Cambridge in 1980. His graduate research was guided by John Coates beginning in the summer of 1975. Together they worked on the arithmetic of elliptic curves with complex multiplication by the methods of Iwasawa theory. He further worked with Barry Mazur on the main conjecture of Iwasawa theory over Q, and soon afterwards generalised this result to totally real fields. Taking approximately 7 years to figure it out, Wiles was the first person to prove Fermat's Last Theorem, going into history in doing so.
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Andrew Wiles was born in 1953 and from his own recollection began having an interest in mathematics at a very young age. He attended the Leys School in Cambridge, England and later earned his BA from Merton College. He went on to earn a Ph.D. at Clare College located in Cambridge. Andrew Wiles did have the luxury of mentors with incredible and gifted minds. John Coates assisted Wiles with his graduate studies and he ... had the opportunity to work on Iwasawa Theory with Barry Mazur While Andrew continues to make a significant impact on mathematical discoveries and research, he will always be remembered for one discovery in particular. It stems from the original Fermat’s Last Theorem which Wiles actually learned about when he was the tender age of ten. Based on what he discovered through Fermat’s Last Theorem, his theory was that the rational semistable elliptic curves are modular and because of his continued study based on his beliefs, the modularity theorem was supported.
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The Manila Times is doing its best to cover up the mistakes in its previous article about Dr. Edgar Escultura, Dr. Andrew Wiles, and Fermat’s Last Theorem (FLT). In particular The Times is still claiming in a recent column by Escultura that: 1. Escu…
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