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From: Archimedes Plutonium on 13 Jul 2010 15:25 While I am at it, I may as well clear out all the old unsolved Ancient Greek conjectures of these three: 1) Twin Primes 2) Infinitude of even Perfect Numbers 3) 1 is the only odd Perfect Number I proved Twin Primes and even Perfect Numbers already in this thread so may as well grapple with 1 is the only odd Perfect Number. I did this proof in early 1990s, so it is nothing new as to the technique involved. I won no converts, but sometimes in mathematics a proof acceptance takes longer than finding a proof. People are stubborn and jeolous like anything else. Now the wording of this conjecture is different from the literature for they say No Odd Perfect number exists, but I like to use 1 as an Odd Perfect Number and there is no prejudice to that restatement and proof. Now the way I prove that 1 is the only odd perfect number is that I look upon the smallest even perfect number of 6 and see how it is driven to be "perfect" and I use fractions to get me the insight. So I see 6 as the smallest perfect even number because I see this: 1/6 + 2/6 + 3/6 = 6/6 Now that does not give me any real insight until I turn that around to be this: 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/6 = 1 Now the insights begin to flow. I see that to ever attain "perfectness of number" I need 50% as one factor. Then the major insight occurs, that the numerator is always going to be odd whereas the denominators are going to be a mix of odd and even. Now do many of you readers remember the proof of the square root of 2 is irrational and how we play around with even and odd in the proof? You remember that tussle back and forth of even and odd. Well in the proof that 1 is the only odd perfect number we have a sort of deja vu all over again with even and odd accounting. To be a perfect number such as 6, you need that 50% margin in one divisor. You can never have that 50% in a odd number. Take for example 15 1/15 + 3/15 + 5/15 1/15 + 1/5 + 1/3 So, in my proof in the early 1990s, what I was doing was saying that if a Odd Perfect number larger than 1 exists, it is a very strange number indeed because it would have to have a 50% factor and that would mean it would have to have a denominator that was even when denominators are odd for odd numbers. Archimedes Plutonium http://www.iw.net/~a_plutonium/ whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |