Sympathetic Vibratory Physics - It's a Musical Universe!
 
 SVP Notes
 
  SVP Notes Index

FACTORING

Text: numbers, prime numbers; logic, reason Posted By: Rosalinda Date: Thursday, 28 March 2002, 5:19 p.m. In Response To: WE'RE NOT DOING NUMEROLOGY (oliverhaddo) A fundamental principle of mathematics is known as "the hereditary principle." Everybody knows that if you construct a logical system-- and mathematics as usually defined is nothing but a logical latticework-- everyone knows that if you start out with a system based only on axioms and postulates, and you develop only deductive theorems based on these axioms and postulates, that the entire latticework, which can never be closed, consists of nothing but echoes of the axiomatic assumptions with which you started. Therefore, if one of the axioms is false, the entirety of that field of knowledge collapses. An example: If you say that the only thing that exists in arithmetic is the integers, as counting numbers--that everything else is synthetic-- therefore, so the argument goes, all mathematics must be derived from the counting numbers as the axiomatic foundation. So you start with an axiomatic counting system, 1 + 1, you construct that, and from that elaborated basis you must develop all mathematics. This is essentially what Bertrand Russell and Whitehead demanded: radical nominalism. Therefore, as the case of prime numbers implicitly proves-- the Euler-Riemann theorem, the work of Gauss on prime number sequences, the ingenious foresight of Fermat on this question, the work of Pascal on the question of differential number series- -the entire history of mathematics, center around this fantastic little problem of prime numbers... If we look at the process of counting as iteration, as a function of a one dimensional manifold, we are confronted with "...this fantastic little problem of prime numbers...": we can not determine the distribution or "density" of prime numbers between 1 and any given number N by any other means than that of Eratosthenes? We can not determine what the next prime number, or for that matter, any future prime number in a counting series, will be before it is actually generated by counting? Begin counting 1, (2), (3), 4, (5), 6, (7)...; (all prime numbers are bracketed in parentheses) at first it seems that all the prime numbers are also all the odd numbers; that is by just adding 2 + one, then add 2 + 3, i.e. f(p)= (1+2x). We see, to generate the primes, but as we continue to count, (2), (3), 4, (5), 6, (7), 9, 10, (11), (13), 14, 15, 16, (17), (19), 20, 21, 22, (23) 2..., the "pattern" or function seems to change. For a while it seems to be f(p)= (6x +/- 1) till we reach (23), then it changes again. We seem unable to discover a successor function for, not just all the prime numbers, but any particular continuous series of prime numbers. There have been innumerable functions, theorems, hypotheses, corollaries and conjectures written on this problem: The Prime Number theorem, the Reimann Hypotheses, the Twin Prime conjecture, the Goldbach Conjecture, and the Opperman Conjecture just to name a few. Let us look at a conjecture of Pierre de Fermat. Fermat conjectured that every number of the form (2^2^N +1) is prime. So we call these the Fermat numbers, and when a number of this form is prime, we call it a "Fermat prime"; the only known Fermat primes are the first five Fermat numbers: F0=3, F1=5, F2=17, F3=257, and F4=65537. In 1732 Euler discovered 641 divides F5 and F(n) has been extended to 31, (i.e. 2^2^31 + 1) and no other primes have been generated by this function. It is, therefore, likely, yet not proven, that there are only a finite number Fermat primes. Gauss proved that a regular polygon of n sides can be inscribed in a circle with Euclidean methods (e.g., by compass and straightedge) if and only if n is a power of two times a product of distinct Fermat primes. The method first developed by Eratosthenes in the 3rd Century B.C., with the circle as 2 dimensional manifold, we could construct a cyclical or modulo approach to the determination of the distribution of the prime numbers in the one dimensional manifold of the number line. The limitations of that approach are obvious. Moreover, it actually tells us more about the process generating the non-prime, composite numbers of the number field as, implicitly, an ongoing succession of prime number cycles, than revealing something about the generation of the prime numbers themselves. As a prime number is generated it is implicitly the modulus of an ongoing cycle, which intersects all past and future cycles of previous prime numbers, transforming the entire number field past and future. Yet, we seem unable to account for the generation of that singular event in the number field, the generation of a prime number, till, in fact, it occurs. Perhaps it is the way we count; let us "count" differently. Rather than imagining the number line as straight, one dimensional manifold, i.e. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7...etc., is it possible to count in two dimensions? Numbers in a 2 dimensional manifold are not necessarily what they are in one; but rather than looking at the characteristic differences between two dimensional and one dimensional measure, let us take a more simple construction, and see what happens. Let us generate the number field in 2 dimensions by using a simple a kind of "Archimedean spiral". In the center of a piece of note paper write the number 0. To the right of that write the number 1; above one write 2. Now count to the left 3, 4. Below 4 write 5(at the same level as 0); below 5 write 6. `To the right of 6 write 7, 8, 9; above 9, at the same level as 1 write 10, {and go up 11, 12; now count left of 12, 13, 14, 15 etc.}As you count this way, you will generate a spiral of numbers. Now, beginning with zero, start counting the numbers spiralling out from there. Try it; it is really not difficult. What do you notice, almost immediately: a certain number of prime numbers are generated along various diagonals of the number field. (see footnote) Now, if we begin counting with 5 as our first number in the center of our spiral, we notice that between 5 and its square, 25, all the numbers that lie on a diagonal connecting 5 and 25 are prime numbers. They are not all the prime numbers between 5 and 25, but they do define a successor function of prime numbers between 5 and 25. Begin counting at 11 and we generate a diagonal of prime numbers along the axis between the prime number 101 through 11, to 121, the square of 11. If we start counting with our Archimedean spiral at 41, we discover the same generating characteristic: it is a line prime numbers which stretch along the 41 and 1681 diagonal. In fact, if we count in this manner from 41 to 10,000,000, half of the numbers on that diagonal will be prime. When we count in the one dimensional manifold, we can, through the sieve of Eratosthenes, determine that the cyclical, modulo characteristics of the counting numbers, the integers is ordered through the two dimensions of circular action. Yet, there seems to be no "connectedness" at all to the ordering characteristics of the prime numbers, no "pattern" seems to emerge. When we actually begin to count in a two dimensional manifold, a "connectedness" emerges almost immediately, numerical shadows on the wall of Plato's cave. Why? Is there some ordering principle from a higher, perhaps 3 dimensional manifold, ordering the two dimensions of our spiral counting? It doesn't provide us with an actual function for determining the distribution of the prime numbers, nor does it help us develop a successor function, but it does impel us on to a notion of a succession of ordering principles. Footnote Here is a list of the first prime numbers as an aid to investigation. 2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47 53 59 61 67 71 73 79 83 89 97 101 103 107 109 113 127 131 137 139 149 151 157 163 167 173 179 181 191 193 197 199 211 223 227 229 233 239 241 251 257 263 269 271 277 281 283 293 307 311 313 317 331 337 347 349 353 359 367 373 379 383 389 397 401 409 419 421 431 433 439 443 449 457 461 463 467 479 487 491 499 503 509 521 523 541 547 557 563 569 571 577 587 593 599 601 607 613 617 619 631 641 643 647 653 659 661 673 677 683 691 701 709 719 727 733 739 743 751 757 761 769 773 787 797 809 811 821 823 827 829 839 853 857 859 863 877 881 883 887 907 911 919 929 937 941 947 953 967 971 977 983 991 997 1009 1013 1019 1021 1031 1033 1039 1049 1051 1061 1063 1069 1087 1091 1093 1097 1103 1109 1117 1123 1129 1151 1153 1163 1171 1181 1187 1193 1201 1213 1217 1223 1229 1231 1237 1249 1259 1277 1279 1283 1289 1291 1297 1301 1303 1307 1319 1321 1327 1361 1367 1373 1381 1399 1409 1423 1427 1429 1433 1439 1447 1451 1453 1459 1471 1481 1483 1487 1489 1493 1499 1511 1523 1531 1543 1549 1553 1559 1567 1571 1579 1583 1597 1601 1607 1609 1613 1619 1621 1627 1637 1657 1663 1667 1669 1693

See Also:

Source:

Top of Page | Master Index | Home | What's New | FAQ | Catalog