III. Fermat and Mathematics


Apart from his outstanding role in number theory, Fermat was also involved in a series of works on other mathematical areas worth mentioning. But at this point it is necessary to understand that for Fermat, mathematics was always just a form of leisure,  which meant he never had any ambition in extending his fame among fellow mathematicians. To the contrary, he tried to avoid the work of publication and merely stated his discoveries in letters to some ot the best mathematicians in France. His only published treatise was anonymously published.  Without Mersenne, who was in constant correspondence with Fermat and who passed his papers on to other interested mathematicians, Fermat might even have been forgotten.

Another very important aspect is also Fermat’s love for posing problems, for which he already worked out the proofs, to other mathematicians, so as to challenging them and also to lead them into his favoured fields of study. Unfortunately this method annoyed a few of his contemporaries and his ‘unsolvable’ problems were considered both as big challenges and as a source of frustration.

As explained in Chapter II, the reputation of each mathematician depended a great deal on his attitude towards his field of study, and Fermat’s attitude clearly did not make him popular among his colleagues. In light of this, it does not seem so unnatural that Fermat was only immortalized for his note about his Last Theorem, and did not have great popularity among his contemporaries. However, Fermat deserved to be famous for his major contributions in many fields of mathematics and physics, as we shall now see.
 
 



 
Index Chapter I Chapter II Chapter IV Chapter V Chapter VI