08/31/2013, 02:18 AM
Hi Tommy,
Thanks for the comments. At the end of the problem, it cites a paper, which contains motivations and background of the conjecture.
Best,
matrix
Thanks for the comments. At the end of the problem, it cites a paper, which contains motivations and background of the conjecture.
Best,
matrix
(08/28/2013, 10:52 PM)tommy1729 Wrote: Maybe it is trivial when I look at it again , but I see variables z,a,k,p,t and maybe more. Then you talk about a derivative and say this and that is trivial. For starters derivative with respect to which variable ??
"things should be stated as simple as possible , but not any simpler " Albert Einstein.
In other words I would prefer a bit more detail and context.
Then I might take a look at it. Afterall imho conjectures look a bit random without some background or motivation , and getting a question popular in a controversial field ( like tetration ) requires extra care for clarity.
Im a fighter for free access to info which might contradict the goals of your career or university or even certain website policies , if that turns out to be the case im sorry if I might loose intrest if you do not clarify.
I might seem harsch but imho being clear is important from both the perspectives of math , communication and popularizing ideas. Although I realise that " going fast " / " skipping the trivial " might make you look more " intelligent " and " professional ".
the probability of getting a problem solved depends imho on its popularity and searchability and that is also the reason im into free access.
Welcome to the tetration forum
regards
tommy1729

