From owner-qed Mon Nov 14 10:53:01 1994 Received: from localhost (listserv@localhost) by antares.mcs.anl.gov (8.6.4/8.6.4) id KAA29234 for qed-out; Mon, 14 Nov 1994 10:51:51 -0600 Received: from chelm.nmt.edu (chelm.nmt.edu [129.138.6.50]) by antares.mcs.anl.gov (8.6.4/8.6.4) with ESMTP id KAA29229 for ; Mon, 14 Nov 1994 10:51:43 -0600 Received: (from yodaiken@localhost) by chelm.nmt.edu (8.6.8.1/8.6.6) id JAA06851; Mon, 14 Nov 1994 09:55:12 -0700 Message-Id: <199411141655.JAA06851@chelm.nmt.edu> From: yodaiken@sphinx.nmt.edu (Victor Yodaiken) Date: Mon, 14 Nov 1994 09:55:11 -0700 In-Reply-To: kunen@cs.wisc.edu (Ken Kunen) "The Fermat-Wiles Theorem" (Nov 14, 10:36am) reply_to: yodaiken@chelm.nmt.edu X-Mailer: Mail User's Shell (7.2.5 10/14/92) To: kunen@cs.wisc.edu (Ken Kunen), qed@mcs.anl.gov Subject: Re: The Fermat-Wiles Theorem Sender: owner-qed@mcs.anl.gov Precedence: bulk On Nov 14, 10:36am, Ken Kunen wrote: Subject: The Fermat-Wiles Theorem This appears to be a case of the contagious C.S. disease first exhibited by Babbage who applied for a grant for the more ambitious project after the modest project failed. When we can verify the theorems in Graham/Knuth/Pashniak or those in, say, an introductory calc or graph theory book, it might be reasonable to speak of Wiles theorem.