Wow, razorfishsi, you should have taken more time to read this post as Altoidnerd was asking some valid questions and you might have missed some points and Altoidnerd you should not react so quickly and defensively.
Anyway, Altoidnerd, I think that often, the whole point of these maths/science things is asking what are the questions and not just what are the answers. If you can break these things down into what are the number theoretic questions that need to be answered then that is just as much of the work as providing the answer.
Some of the most interesting/difficult mathematics is about providing the questions that need to be answered. So I don't think that what you're asking for is so straightforward.
Hypotheses are just questions and Riemann, for example, is famous for asking a question, and not for providing an answer to it.