Laar wrote:
I assumed your problem is: proof that the prime factorization of a number is unique, is this correct?
I cannot quite tell from LordoftheMonkey's original post what the problem is.
If the problem is "prove that the prime factorization of a given number is unique", then you might as well refer to the Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic ("the prime factorization of
every number is unique"), which was properly proven by Gauss, although practically proven by Euclid. See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamenta ... arithmetic
If the problem is proving that a given theorem has one unique proof, then I'd be very stuck on that one. But I would guess that it's possible, given that it is possible to prove that a given proposition cannot be proved within a given system. (Eg, It's been shown that Euclid's parallel postulate cannot be derived from his other axioms of geometry.)