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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!spool.mu.edu!caen!uflorida!usf.edu!darwin!mccolm
- From: mccolm@darwin.math.usf.edu. (Gregory McColm)
- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Subject: Re: Prime conjecture
- Message-ID: <1992Sep4.194630.1234@ariel.ec.usf.edu>
- Date: 4 Sep 92 19:46:30 GMT
- References: <18990@nntp_server.ems.cdc.com> <1992Aug20.205430.19539@ariel.ec.usf.edu> <17dg0nINNo1j@hilbert.math.ksu.edu>
- Sender: news@ariel.ec.usf.edu (News Admin)
- Organization: Univ. of South Florida, Math Department
- Lines: 34
-
- In article <17dg0nINNo1j@hilbert.math.ksu.edu> bennett@math.ksu.edu (Andy Bennett) writes:
- >mccolm@darwin.math.usf.edu. (Gregory McColm) writes:
- >
- >>The "Twin primes conjecture" goes back to ancient Greece:
- >
- >What is a reference for this. I went looking once and couldn't find a good
- >reference for when the Twin primes conjecture was first made.
- >
- >Thanks
- >
- >Andy B.
- >
- P
-
- I had heard that the twin primes conjecture goes
- back to ancient Greece in a number theory course.
- I just looked in my study, and none of the history
- books mention it. Davies & Hersch's Mathematical
- Experience calls it a major problem, but doesn't
- mention its history. Ivar Paterson's [sic?]
- Mathematical Tourist says that many mathematicians
- have been working on it in the last 100 years.
-
- Several people have told me that it was a Greek
- problem, and that's what I thought, too (one would
- think that surely Erastosthenes would have noticed
- the problem) but that may be a myth. There are many
- myths about, eg, the tale that the 4-color problem
- is an ancient cartographer's problem, when in
- fact the oldest references known are about a 100
- years old. Anyone got any old references to the
- problem, at least so far as the Renaissance?
-
- -----Greg McColm
-