Mathematical Problem Set
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A Mathematical Problem Set is a problem collection that consists of related mathematical challenges organized around common themes or objectives.
- AKA: Mathematical Challenge Collection, Problem List, Mathematical Problem Collection, Mathematical Challenge Suite.
- Context:
- It can typically organize Mathematical Problems with thematic connections.
- It can typically motivate Mathematical Research through prize incentives.
- It can typically advance Mathematical Fields through focused challenges.
- It can often establish Research Priorities within mathematical communities.
- It can often inspire Breakthrough Discoveries through collaborative efforts.
- It can range from being a Historical Mathematical Problem Set to being a Contemporary Mathematical Problem Set, depending on its temporal origin.
- It can range from being a Solved Mathematical Problem Set to being an Open Mathematical Problem Set, depending on its solution status.
- It can range from being a Pure Mathematics Problem Set to being an Applied Mathematics Problem Set, depending on its mathematical domain.
- It can range from being a Prize-Bearing Mathematical Problem Set to being a Non-Incentivized Mathematical Problem Set, depending on its reward structure.
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- Example:
- Counter-Example:
- Exercise Set, which contains routine problems for educational purposes.
- Single Mathematical Problem, which lacks collection structure.
- See: Mathematical Problem, Problem Solving Task, Mathematical Research, Prize Problem, Open Problem, Mathematical Conjecture, Research Challenge, Millennium Prize Problems, Navier-Stokes Singularity Problem.