 Really, loser forever, significance of prime numbers. If we're taking questions, I understand the definition, but do they have a greater purpose in math? Yeah, for sure. Look, they're the building blocks of the real number set. They're the atoms, and everything else is the molecules, right? So, these guys, prime numbers, consider these the atoms are the elements of the world. What you use to make everything else, right? So, H2O, H2O is water, right? It's two hydrogens and an oxygen and two hydrogens and H and an H, right? The number 12 is four times three and four is two times two. Two, two, three. H, H, O. That's what prime numbers are. They're the elements of mathematics. Loser forever, oh my God. Yeah, it's brilliant. It's brilliant, right? But you just made that click in a way that has never, never has masters in accounting, by the way. You got masters in accounting, nice. I took accounting courses. It wasn't my thing, it wasn't my thing. Yeah, that's what it is. Once I explain this to students, it clicks for them, right? Important, important. And this is one of the things we focus on when we start talking about prime numbers, right? And before we get into operations is prime factorization. Prime factorization, which is this. That's what we do, right? That's what we do, okay? And if you wanna be really blown away to a certain degree, when you get into functions, when you get into functions, for example, here's a parabola. This color isn't good. Let's see if this one's better. Here's a parabola, right? A parabola is really two lines multiplied together. So you can break this down into one line times another line, right? So linear functions are the building blocks of other types of functions, if you wanna think about it, or polynomial functions. But anyway, we'll get into that stuff. I've talked about the stuff in the language of mathematics, the videos I made before, and ASMR math, right?