Comment by jfengel

3 days ago

Fermat lived for nearly three decades after writing that note about the marvelous proof. It's not as if he never got a chance to write it down. So it sure wasn't his "last theorem" -- later ones include proving the specific case of n=4.

There are many invalid proofs of the theorem, some of whose flaws are not at all obvious. It is practically certain that Fermat had one of those in mind when he scrawled his note. He realized that and abandoned it, never mentioning it again (or correcting the note he scrawled in the margin).

It was called Fermat's last theorem because it was the only one of the theorems stated by Fermat that remained to be proved at the time