Pierre de Fermat
Years:
Title: Prince of Amateur Mathematicians
Pierre de Fermat
Born: 1601
Died: 1665
Title: Prince of Amateur Mathematicians / Father of Number Theory
The Greatest "Amateur Player" in History
Fermat's day job was as a lawyer and judge; mathematics was just his hobby. He didn't like publishing papers, preferring to scribble in the margins of books and then send letters challenging other mathematicians.
Core Contributions - Deep Analysis
Fermat's Last Theorem
While reading Arithmetica, he wrote in the margin: " (when ) has no integer solutions. I have discovered a truly marvelous proof of this, which this margin is too narrow to contain."
This "too narrow to contain" note puzzled mathematicians worldwide for 358 years, until it was finally proven by Andrew Wiles in 1994. (In fact, Fermat likely did not have a proof, or his proof was incorrect.)
Fermat's Little Theorem
A fundamental theorem in number theory that states: if is a prime number and is an integer not divisible by , then .
The Birth of Probability Theory
Through correspondence with Pascal, he solved the "problem of points" (dividing stakes), laying the foundation for modern probability theory.
Legacy
Fermat established number theory as a serious field of study. His "Last Theorem" became one of the most famous unsolved problems in mathematics, inspiring generations of mathematicians. His work in probability theory, done through correspondence with Pascal, created an entirely new branch of mathematics.
