From: JOHN on
The incomprehensible work of a precocious mathematician. In 1828, while
still a teenager, �variste Galois solved the long-standing problem of
determining the condition for a polynomial to be solvable by radicals. He
produced a memoir that was submitted several times to the Academy of
Sciences but never published in his lifetime. His first attempt was refused
by Cauchy. He re-submitted it to Fourier, the Academy's secretary, but
Fourier died soon after and the memoir was lost. Simeon Poisson asked him to
again submit his work, but found it incomprehensible, declaring that

"Galois' argument is neither sufficiently clear nor sufficiently developed
to allow us to judge its rigor."

Galois reacted violently to the rejection letter and decided to publish his
papers privately. While in prison for political activism, he polished his
ideas. Set for a duel after his release, and convinced of his impending
death, he stayed up all night composing what would become his mathematical
testament. On May 30th, 1832, at age 21, he was shot and died. Galois'
mathematical contributions were published in full in 1843. His work led to
what is now called Galois field theory, with direct applications in coding
and cryptography.


From: JOHN on

"Ostap S. B. M. Bender Jr." <ostap_bender_1900(a)hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:2f6c19e2-09dc-4297-b52e-dd1e37bf25e4(a)30g2000yqi.googlegroups.com...
On Apr 8, 2:20 am, Link <marty.musa...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> *On Apr 7, 7:22 pm, "JOHN" <nos...(a)invalid.com> wrote:

accept the fact that you will never get better,

you condition is worsening,

and your thinking is un stybable goanitk yumikwsby.


From: Bacle on
Not only is musatov stupid, he lacks any scruples.