Capital Wealth Capital Wealth Client Login
Home Intelligence Portfolios Annuities
Planning
Planning Overview Pension Maximization 403(b) for Teachers 401(k) Planning Cash Balance & DB Plans Police / Fire & County Safety Federal, Postal & Nurses Social Security Timing Sequence of Returns Modern Portfolio Theory Life Insurance Long-Term Care & ADLs Medicare & Retiree Health Estate Planning Tax-Efficient Withdrawal 2026 Tax Guide
Advanced Planning
Executive Compensation Oil & Gas Sector Canadian Cross-Border Calculators Services About Client Login
MON · JUN 15, 2026  |  DJIA 51,671.03 ▲ 0.92% · RECORD  ·  NASDAQ 26,683.94 ▲ 3.1%  ·  WTI $80.75 ▼ $4.13 · IRAN DEAL  ·  GOLD $4,328.00 ▲ $113  ·  10Y TREAS 4.468%  |  CAPITAL WEALTH SPECIALTY REPORT  | 
Specialty · Ideas · Opinion

AI Just Cracked A 1946 Math Problem. Is It Really Doing Math?

An OpenAI model recently disproved a math conjecture the great Paul Erdős posed in 1946 — and human mathematicians confirmed the result. A sharp essay asks whether machine-generated proof counts as real mathematics. The answer shapes how we should use AI everywhere, money included.

Capital Wealth Daily · Analysis by Sean Anees Saifi · June 16, 2026
A chalkboard covered in elegant handwritten equations in a quiet study.
The machine got the right answer. Did it understand it?

The Breakthrough

OpenAI announced that one of its models disproved a longstanding conjecture — the “unit distance problem” posed by mathematician Paul Erdős in 1946 — and human mathematicians verified that the result holds. That’s a genuine milestone: a machine produced a correct, checkable piece of new mathematics.

But Is It Math?

The essayist’s deeper question is whether that counts as doing mathematics. Math, he argues, has always been a human, social activity — understanding, communicating, and building on ideas — not just generating a correct string of symbols. The right posture, he concludes, is to treat AI as a powerful partner to be checked, not an oracle to be trusted blindly.

What This Means For The Book

That’s exactly how we use AI on this desk. It’s a phenomenal tool for crunching, scanning and drafting — but the judgment, the “does this actually make sense for this family,” stays human. A model can produce a correct-looking answer the same way it produced a correct proof; our job is to verify it against reality before it touches a real portfolio. Use the machine; never outsource the understanding.

Themes & Tickers In This Article

Symbols are listed for reference. Not a recommendation. See Capital Wealth Model Portfolios for current allocations.

Q2 Review — 15 Minutes, Phone Or Zoom

Want to talk about where a theme like this does — and doesn’t — belong in your plan? Bring your statement; we translate the headline into a position-level decision.

Book Q2 Review →View Portfolios →