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Galois in a Nutshell

Introduction

He gave us a new way at looking at the solvability of equations. Specifically, he showed


that polynomials of degree 5 or greater cannot be solved in radicals. The most
puzzling thing about this is why 5? What's so special about 5? That’s the beauty of the
result. He showed by pure thinking alone that 5 is the magic numbers. What’s even
more remarkable was that today’s mathematicians use Field Theory, a topic that was
unknown to Galois.

Main Work

He gave us a new way at looking at the solvability of equations. Specifically, he showed


that polynomials of degree 5 or greater cannot be solved in radicals. The most
puzzling thing about this is why 5? What's so special about 5? That’s the beauty of the
result. He showed by pure thinking alone that 5 is the magic numbers. What’s even
more remarkable was that today’s mathematicians use Field Theory, a topic that was
unknown to Galois.

What He is Famous For

He gave us a new way at looking at the solvability of equations. Specifically, he showed


that polynomials of degree 5 or greater cannot be solved in radicals. The most
puzzling thing about this is why 5? What's so special about 5? That’s the beauty of the
result. He showed by pure thinking alone that 5 is the magic numbers. What’s even
more remarkable was that today’s mathematicians use Field Theory, a topic that was
unknown to Galois.
Take-aways

He gave us a new way at looking at the solvability of equations. Specifically, he showed


that polynomials of degree 5 or greater cannot be solved in radicals. The most
puzzling thing about this is why 5? What's so special about 5? That’s the beauty of the
result. He showed by pure thinking alone that 5 is the magic numbers. What’s even
more remarkable was that today’s mathematicians use Field Theory, a topic that was
unknown to Galois.

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