The Strong Law of Small Numbers is an informal statement made by Richard K. Guy: "There aren't enough small numbers to meet the many demands made of them." More precisely, there are not enough small numbers relative to the multitude of sequences, properties, and patterns that can be defined on the natural numbers. This disparity causes a kind of pigeonholing of sequences over the small numbers, whereby small numbers belong to many different sequences. (To illustrate, search the OEIS for 2, 22, 222, 2222... and compare the number of results for each.) As such, two sequences may coincide for small values before diverging at larger values, and "capricious coincidences cause careless conjectures". In a sense, because their inclusion in an arbitrary sequence is less necessary, larger numbers ar
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