Goldbach
Hippocrates and Euclid made their greatest achievements in the fields of Mathematics, Medicine, and Engineering.
Euclid, with geometry!
There is no logical conjecture that can be made for what could be an irregular polygon with an unknown number of sides. Of course, you could always conjecture anything. For example, that they will taste of strawberries. A conjecture that, I guess, will be disproved quite easily.
Euclid made significant contributions to the study of prime numbers in his work "Elements," particularly in Book IX, where he established the fundamental theorem that there are infinitely many prime numbers. He provided a proof by contradiction, demonstrating that if you assume a finite number of primes, you can construct a new number that cannot be divisible by any of them, thus leading to a contradiction. This foundational result laid the groundwork for further exploration in number theory and the properties of primes.
No, prime numbers already existed. Euclid simply made some important mathematical contributions related to prime numbers. Among others, he discovered a surprisingly simple proof that the set of prime numbers is infinite; and he discovered that the prime factorization of any natural number is unique.
Goldbach
Hippocrates and Euclid made their greatest achievements in the fields of Mathematics, Medicine, and Engineering.
a book made by euclid.
Euclid, with geometry!
There is no logical conjecture that can be made for what could be an irregular polygon with an unknown number of sides. Of course, you could always conjecture anything. For example, that they will taste of strawberries. A conjecture that, I guess, will be disproved quite easily.
he made geometry and theroms
he made the properties of the polygons.
a conjecture
A conjecture
umm he made geometry easier?
nonsence