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  is there any truth in this answer? and if so why the problem is considered to be not solved?

+ 2 like - 0 dislike
837 views asked Apr 16 in Open problems by Semenov [ revision history ]

The community judgment is that in spite of the claims in the first two papers, nothing of importance is solved. Otherwise there would be a large number of citations. In scholar.google.com, the first paper has only 3, all self-citations. The second is unpublished, has no citations, and is not even on the arXiv.

The third paper is published and reasonably well cited, but it is on classical Yang-Mills in 1+1d, well-known stuff.

The problem is a philosophical one,  probably, it will be closed, rather as out of date, than solved one. 

|The first two articles provide a complete answer indeed.

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