(EDIT: I've marked this question as answered in order that I can go away and come up with a better one. Thanks to everybody for the helpful answers.)
Is it possible to describe the RH in language comprehensible to a non-mathematician?
In my experience (as a non-mathematician) the answer is a definite 'no'. But before I give up on it I thought I'd ask for some views.
By 'explain' I do not mean explain fully. I mean explain the basic structure of the hypothesis. Something like - we feed values into a function and the output is plotted to create a landscape and a critical line appears and we conjecture that all zero outputs fall on this line. I expect even this is wrong but it's this level of explanation that I'm after, with just a bit more detail added.
I've spent a long time trying to understand the relationship between the inputs and outputs of the Zeta calculation and got nowhere. Yet I'm not stupid. There's something I'm missing but none of the explanations I've been offered allow me to understand what it is.
I know a bit about the primes but must ask for answers in a more or less natural language or will not be able to cope. I know such requests annoy mathematicians but I can only ask.
I have read Du Sautoy, Derbyshire and much more but never found an explanation that doesn't assume I'm a graduate mathematician. I need a children's book on the topic that describes it in very general terms.
Is such a thing possible?
EDIT: Vincent has suggested a similar but perhaps interestingly different question. This is - is there an intuitive explanation why the Riemann zeta FUNCTION (rather than hypothesis) contains interesting information about the distribution of primes in language comprehensible to a non-mathematician?
My intuition is that the explanation would be the harmonic series and its role in determining the distribution of primes. I'll hesitatingly ask if this makes any sense. Or are there other reasons? As it happens I'm coming at this as a musician and have an interest in the musical aspect of the distribution or primes, or rather in the distribution of non-primes that determines the primes.
EDIT 2: I see that similar questions have been asked previously. Thanks to the members who have provided links to them. I've been checking them and so far they have been helpful but not so much as to persuade me to take this one down. This may change as I keep reading and I'll withdraw this one if so.