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   BBC Horizon 1996 Fermats Last Theorem PDTV x264 AAC

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[#151506] Written by: phishybongwaters [23/01/11, 06:49]
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I hope this is correct:

"At the age of ten, browsing through his public library, Andrew Wiles stumbled across the world's
greatest mathematical puzzle. Fermat's Last Theorem had baffled mathematicians for over 300 years.
But from that day, little Andrew dreamed of solving it. Tonight's HORIZON tells the story of his
obsession, and how, thirty years later, he gave up everything to achieve his childhood dream. "

Seriously though, please enter a basic description for these torrents, plenty of people won't
download it until they know they want to watch it.
[#151508] Written by: l214 [23/01/11, 07:38]
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The following description is from another site I visit - I'm presuming the shows are one and the
same? If I'm wrong, then bad luck.

Fermat's Last Theorem

Simon Singh and John Lynch's film tells the enthralling and emotional story of Andrew Wiles. A quiet
English mathematician, he was drawn into maths by Fermat's puzzle, but at Cambridge in the '70s, FLT
was considered a joke, so he set it aside. Then, in 1986, an extraordinary idea linked this
irritating problem with one of the most profound ideas of modern mathematics: the Taniyama-Shimura
Conjecture, named after a young Japanese mathematician who tragically committed suicide. The link
meant that if Taniyama was true then so must be FLT. When he heard, Wiles went after his childhood
dream again. "I knew that the course of my life was changing." For seven years, he worked in his
attic study at Princeton, telling no one but his family. "My wife has only known me while I was
working on Fermat", says Andrew. In June 1993 he reached his goal. At a three-day lecture at
Cambridge, he outlined a proof of Taniyama - and with it Fermat's Last Theorem. Wiles' retiring
life-style was shattered. Mathematics hit the front pages of the world's press. Then disaster
struck. His colleague, Dr Nick Katz, made a tiny request for clarification. It turned into a gaping
hole in the proof. As Andrew struggled to repair the damage, pressure mounted for him to release the
manuscript - to give up his dream. So Andrew Wiles retired back to his attic. He shut out
everything, but Fermat. A year later, at the point of defeat, he had a revelation. "It was the most
important moment in my working life. Nothing I ever do again will be the same." The very flaw was
the key to a strategy he had abandoned years before. In an instant Fermat was proved; a life's
ambition achieved; the greatest puzzle of maths was no more.
File Name: BBC - Horizon - Fermat's Last Theorem (1997)
ipv6 ready