Added: 11 months ago
From: njwildberger
Views: 2,456
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  • WOW I am greek you know... but in Greece, in our schools never teach that to us..!!! too shame... Well done!! And thank you, that I learn from you, my "history".. Ευχαριστώ

  • thank you for sharing your knowledge!!

  • At 29:29 - 44, statement

    "If 2^n-1 is prime, then (2^n-1)x2^n is perfect"

    Is it "if" or "iff," i.e is the opposite:

    "If a number is perfect, then it can be expressed as (2^n-1)x2^n, where 2^n-1 is prime?"

    also true?

    Thanks.

  • @Kurtlane i believe its (2^n - 1)* 2^(n-1) where 2^n -1 is prime, you forgot the minus one in the exponent

  • Wildberger, excellent work as usual.

  • Wow that theorem about perfect numbers was beautiful!

  • Comment removed

  • @wiredboy27 If it's keeping you back from completing your thesis for a Nobel prize in Maths, don't watch it. It's for a History of Mathematics course. It was good of them to upload it as they didn't have to.

    This is a University lecture. People arrive late as they do in all Universities. As long as they don't come in shouting and singing, nobody cares.

    If this video is annoying you, you may want to watch some videos on English sentence construction and punctuation.

  • @wiredboy27 yes...the best i've ever seen...agree

  • love your videos . keep them coming.

  • omg i was so excited for this lesson yessss

  • Thank you :)

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