We were having a discussion on the irreducibility of $1+\sqrt{-3}$ in $\mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{-3}]$
A classmate pointed out that $1+x$ is irreducible in $\mathbb{Z}[x]$, hence, putting $x=\sqrt{-3} \Rightarrow 1+\sqrt{-3}$ is irreducible in $\mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{-3}]$
It was followed by a discussion whether it is a valid claim, and these are the major arguments that came up:
For: By the definition of polynomial rings (in Gallian), because $x$ is a placeholder, we can!
Against: But we can't since $x$ is a placeholder for an element in the ring R itself.
Can someone help us understand the situation better?
Thinking of the $x$ as a place-holder will take you down a path of confusion. Think about $x$ as a formal symbol. The polynomial $1+x$ is irreducible indeed, but that does not mean any element of the form $1+t$ is (is $4=1+3$ irreducible?).