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omra | 12 years ago

No notable mathematician has considered one prime since the early 20th century (of course, I'm oversimplifying, see [1] for more information).

[1]: https://cs.uwaterloo.ca/journals/JIS/VOL15/Caldwell1/cald5.h...

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btilly|12 years ago

You are oversimplifying more than you know.

In a number theory course around 1990, I remember reading papers from the 60s which would explicitly note whether the counts of primes that they were using were starting from 1 or 2. You can define them as not notable mathematicians, but working mathematicians in number theory still had not completely standardized 50 years ago.

Now for more fun, sit down with a group of mathematicians and ask whether they consider 0 to be a natural number. :-)

(The answer you get will vary by field. But none will consider it a particularly important question.)

tel|12 years ago

cperciva answered this according to the modern algebraic understanding in response to the parent. 1 is definitely not prime when you more fully categorize the elements of sets by their algebraic properties: the existence of units is a less singular phenomenon in other algebraic structures.