Re: The Meaning Of The Mean



On Oct 9, 8:00 pm, "bob" <nos...@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"symphony" <mathxxmas...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message

news:1191980597.444116.92570@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Sometimes profound principles have what seemingly are
trivialities at their foundations. For example, would you
be surprised if a great scientific principle was
discovered in a principality known for great intellectuality?

no.



The sine function describes continuous oscillations or
deviations from equilibrium.

wrong on the second part.

In a sociological context
a deviation might be considered as a "sin".

and you are a deviation from normal, a "sin"

Is it just
a coincidence that sin is a deviation, of significant
magnitude, from legal or moral norms and the sine or
sin function describe deviations from equilibrium?

leave POT and acid alone, dude.

Refresh me on the history of GR, if I am not correct.
But was not Einstein motivated by the fact that gravitational
and inertial mass are equivalent but before him that
fact was considered to be a co-incidence?




.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: The Meaning Of The Mean
    ... be surprised if a great scientific principle was ... The sine function describes continuous oscillations or ... a deviation might be considered as a "sin". ... a coincidence that sin is a deviation, ...
    (sci.math)
  • Re: The Meaning Of The Mean
    ... be surprised if a great scientific principle was ... a deviation might be considered as a "sin". ... sin function describe deviations from equilibrium? ...
    (sci.math)