Re: JSH: Wikipedia experiment, prime counting function
jstevh_at_msn.com
Date: 02/06/05
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Date: 6 Feb 2005 05:22:02 -0800
Tim Smith wrote:
> In article <1107629584.334950.92520@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com>,
> jstevh@msn.com wrote:
> > Why hide my research? Why block it?
>
> If you had bothered to read Wikipedia's rules, you would have seen
that
> original research is not allowed. You have to get your research
published
> somewhere else first (such as a peer-reviewed journal), and then a
Wikipedia
> article can explain it and cite that other source.
>
> --
> --Tim Smith
Yeah, but what if mathematicians do not behave as they should?
The formula is not disputed in terms of correctness, so it's more about
the formality of acknowledgement, but mathematicians are not
acknowledging it, so for *social* reasons you say, just let the
knowledge die?
I say you people are liars. You don't actually care about mathematics
itself but about what it can do for you and your social order, as
clearly shown by my experiment.
It just so happens that my prime counting function has an extraordinary
utility as a *compact* representation of a working prime counting
function, so it fits easily into a small article on prime counting.
Now that fact is not something that can be disputed, but you people
abhor the truth, so you will ignore it or lie about it to instead claim
my discovery is of no value.
You are liars from beginning to end, so there's no reason people should
believe you won't lie about other things, like supposed mathematical
discoveries.
I've shown you to be pretenders. It's just a matter of time before you
feel the consequences.
You are destroying yourselves, slowly, yes, but soon enough, you will
be seen throughout the world for what you truly are.
James Harris
- Next message: jstevh_at_msn.com: "JSH: Reality versus what you say"
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