Today I relistened to more of A Brief History of Mathematics. That might seem like it hardly qualifies as study, but I think it is helping revive my desire to continue this project. It comprises mathematical bedtime stories, told by an enthusiast, with a very light sprinkling of actual mathematical ideas—just enough to be tantalizing without being overwhelming.
I also thought a bit about one of those ideas, a theorem in number theory discovered by Gauss: that every natural number is the sum of three triangular numbers. I didn’t put my full focus into it, though, and I didn’t come up with any insights.
[Later note: The theorem only holds as stated if we let 0 be a triangular number. Definitions appear to differ on that point.]
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