1 can be prime just like 2 or 3 since 1 is indivisible by any other natural number besides 1 and oneself, which is again 1, but we don't want 1 to be a prime number. The real reason everyone in the universe wouldn't want 1 to be a prime is that 1 would SPOIL a perfectly cool theorem, the fundamental theorem of arithmetic (FTA), not because 1 contradicts FTA. how so? before proving FTA we made a choice not to let 1 be a prime, so 1 can't come back contradict FTA, right?

ok, why did we choose not to choose 1 to be a prime? let's recall what FTA say; every positive integer greater than 1 can be expessed UNIQUELY as a product of primes up to the ordering. Remember, like all the book said, primes are the number 2,3,5,7,11,...(2^25964951)-1,...
Thus IFFFFFFFFFF 1 were a prime

then multiplying 1 to the product of primes doesn't change the value/magnitude of the product but only put more factors into an already nice looking product of primes,i.e. 1 would mess up an important property an interesting claim, the UNIQUENESS in the FTA. now you see that our choice not to let 1 be a prime was a right choice? it's important to make a good choice and a right one too, right?

try this with an example, say a PERFECTly good positive integer greater than 1, 6. FTA says; 6=2x3, a unique product of primes 2 and 3 up to the ordering (3x2).
Look what good can come of 1 being a prime?

6=1x2x3=1x1x2x3=1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1x1xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx1x2x3,
nothing

. 1 just going to make a nice looking product of primes, 2x3, look bad. therefore we ought to be happy with just 2,3,5,7,11,... being primes

. there is enough prime numbers for everyONE.
