←back to thread

97 points isaacfrond | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
nomilk ◴[] No.41850289[source]
How do mathematicians come to focus on seemingly arbitrary quesrions:

> another asks whether there are infinitely many pairs of primes that differ by only 2, such as 11 and 13

Is it that many questions were successfully dis/proved and so were left with some that seem arbitrary? Or is there something special about the particular questions mathematicians focus on that a layperson has no hope of appreciating?

My best guess is questions like the one above may not have any immediate utility, but could at any time (for hundreds of years) become vital to solving some important problem that generates huge value through its applications.

replies(12): >>41850407 #>>41850513 #>>41850594 #>>41850601 #>>41850607 #>>41850643 #>>41850663 #>>41850700 #>>41851013 #>>41851247 #>>41852106 #>>41855465 #
1. QuesnayJr ◴[] No.41850607[source]
I think if you are fascinated by primes and look at lists of primes, you would eventually notice that twin primes keep happening, but they get further and further apart. The first time someone published the conjecture that there are infinitely many is Polignac in 1849, but I'm sure someone wondered before.

If you are fascinated by primes, then you just want to know the answer, independent of any application.