Andrew Wiles
Andrew Wiles
Sir Andrew John Wiles KBE FRSis a British mathematician and a Royal Society Research Professor at the University of Oxford, specialising in number theory. He is most notable for proving Fermat's Last Theorem, for which he received the 2016 Abel Prize. Wiles has received numerous other honours...
NationalityEnglish
ProfessionMathematician
Date of Birth11 April 1953
eight english-mathematician obsessed problem sleep thinking time woke
There's also a sense of freedom. I was so obsessed by this problem that I was thinking about if all the time - when I woke up in the morning, when I went to sleep at night, and that went on for eight years.
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I loved doing problems in school. I'd take them home and make up new ones of my own. But the best problem I ever found, I found in my local public library. I was just browsing through the section of math books and I found this one book, which was all about one particular problem - Fermat's Last Theorem.
school problem problems-in-school
I loved doing problems in school.
library problem found
But the best problem I ever found, I found in my local public library.
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The greatest problem for mathematicians now is probably the Riemann Hypothesis.
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The definition of a good mathematical problem is the mathematics it generates rather than the problem itself.
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Pure mathematicians just love to try unsolved problems - they love a challenge.
trying matter problem
Always try the problem that matters most to you.
thinking understanding problem
I tried to fit it in with some previous broad conceptual understanding of some part of mathematics that would clarify the particular problem I was thinking about.
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I would wake up with it first thing in the morning, I would be thinking about it all day and I would be thinking about it when I went to sleep.
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It could be that the methods needed to take the next step may simply be beyond present day mathematics. Perhaps the methods I needed to complete the proof would not be invented for a hundred years.
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Well, some mathematics problems look simple, and you try them for a year or so, and then you try them for a hundred years, and it turns out that they're extremely hard to solve.
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Perhaps the methods I needed to complete the proof would not be invented for a hundred years. So even if I was on the right track, I could be living in the wrong century.
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I realized that anything to do with Fermat's Last Theorem generates too much interest.