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Originally Posted by AntonioLao I trying to publish this algorithm on prime factors and algorithmic proof of Goldbach conjecture for that $1 million prize. So Im stick to something that Im good at. |
That sounds fascinating! Hope you win the prize, AntonioLao! -
Even though I haven't studied math in any advanced detail, it was always my favorite subject back at university - and usually I even got the best mark in class on tests . Anyway, Throughout my life I loved doing math puzzles and presently I am trying to figure out the significance of the relationship between pi, e and phi - if any. Now I also better read up on the Goldbach conjecture - so that I know what I am talking about if I can congratulate you once you get the algorithm published.
By the way, I only recently found out that my strange affection for a generally quite hated subject, such as math is, must have been passed on genetically as a possibly recessive gene since my great-uncle (who died almost 100 years ago) apparently was such a well-known and well-liked mathematician and physicist in the old Austro-Hungarian Monarchy that he even shows up in today's Czech encyclopedias. A Czech mathematics journal even published a 10-page biography on him a few years ago. What a surprising, and even thrilling, genealogical find! My late mother never told me of this her uncle's fame, only that he was a very kind and compassionate person.
Anyway, I am telling you this so that perhaps you might also do some online genealogical research to find a famous mathematician among your own ancestral families whose spirit (or Michael's "consciousness", one of the intangible parts of the TOE) could then help you put together the "elegant proof" you need for achieving your goal.
Regards,
-Spiral Path