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Andrew Wiles and The
Wolfskehl Prize The Daily
Telegraph by Simon
Singh
Surrounded by portraits of the
Hanoverian kings Wiles shook hands with Wagner, accepted the
prize, and the audience applauded wildly. His speech described
how he had heard about Fermat’s Last Theorem and the Wolfskehl
Prize when he was ten years old, and how he had become
obsessed by the search for a proof. I have known Wiles since
he completed his proof in 1995, and his passion for the Last
Theorem has not diminished in the slightest. Each time he
recalls how he completed the proof his voice becomes hesitant,
reflecting the emotion he feels for the problem.
Although the crucial breakthroughs
in the proof occurred during a secret calculation which
required eight years of working in secrecy and isolation,
Wiles concluded his speech by acknowledging the work of his
peers. His proof involved many of the greatest ideas of the
last four decades, and is a vindication of modern mathematical
techniques. In order to solve an ancient problem, he had caste
these ideas in a new light, and the hope is that Wiles’
innovative approach will offer in-roads towards cracking a
whole series of other hitherto unsolved problems.
Although Wiles actually finished
his proof in 1995, the Göttingen Academy demanded two years of
verification before awarding the prize. During the intervening
period Wiles has attempted to concentrate on other research,
but Fermat has continued to dominate his life. After the
ceremony, Wiles told me that he hopes the awarding of the
Wolfskehl Prize will officially mark the end of the Fermat’s
Last Theorem, and allow him to pursue other
problems.
As for the members of the Academy
responsible for prize, there were obvious signs of relief. The
painstaking task of examining hundreds of entries has
interrupted their research, but even now there is no guarantee
that enthusiastic amateurs will not give up. Wiles’ proof is
too complicated to be Fermat’s original calculation (if he had
one?) and so many mathematicians continue to search for a
seventeenth century proof and each week one or two letters
arrive at the Academy. |