Fermat's Last Theorem: Difference between revisions

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{{quote|("It is impossible for a cube to be the sum of two cubes, a fourth power to be the sum of two fourth powers, or in general for any number that is a power greater than the second to be the sum of two like powers. I have discovered a truly marvelous demonstration of this proposition that this margin is too narrow to contain.")<ref>In [[Layman's Terms]], take this equation: x<sup>n</sup> + y<sup>n</sup> = z<sup>n</sup>. The Last Theorm dictactes that if n is a number above 2, you can't use whole numbers (2, 3, 4, etc.) for the x, y and z.</ref>|'''Pierre de Fermat'''}}
 
Think math class is hard? ''This'' math problem was ''so'' difficult it took 350 years to solve.
 
Fermat, a prominent 17th-century amateur mathematician, wrote the above note in his copy of a number theory textbook. By the time he died, the textbook was full of such teasing notes; his son published a new annotated edition of the book containing all of these notes in their proper places.