Re: The birth and life of the universe.
- From: "Tom Potter" <tdp1001@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 22 Jan 2009 09:25:30 +0800
"Eric Gisse" <jowr.pi@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:7953fd3b-c0a6-4744-930d-fa9ccb2a761b@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Jan 21, 2:14 am, "Tom Potter" <tdp1...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Eric Gisse" <jowr...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in messagenews:d00d896e-3bd1-40c9-a693-1de1fe5ffaa3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Jan 9, 1:20 am, "Tom Potter" <tdp1...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Contiguous things form an environment,
and the environment in turn modulates
the birth and death rates of
the things within the environment.
In a nurturing environment,
a population increases exponentially,
and in a non-nurturing environment,
a population decreases exponentially.
population(generation n+1) = population(generation n) * e^ (k*time)
Euler Formula
e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0
which is best stated as:
e^(i*( circumference / diameter)) + 1 = 0
That is not how pi is defined, idiot. Take a remedial course in
business calculus and try again.
[snip stupidity]
========================
Potter writes:
I am surprised to see that Eric Gisse
who claims to be a high school graduate
does not know that
circumference = diameter * pi
* Again, that is not how pi is defined. Idiot.
It is interesting to see that Eric Gisse,
who claims to be a high school graduate,
objects to my use of "pi"
as the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter,
and redirects his post to his family's private newsgroup.
Hopefully, my high school pal
will address the gestalt of my post (If he comprehends it.)
and explain how this invalidates my post.
Pi is a mathematical constant whose value is the ratio of any circle's circumference to its diameter in Euclidean space,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pi
Pi is a numerical constant that represents the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter on a flat plane surface.
http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/0,,sid9_gci283995,00.html
Perhaps Gisse's problem is that he was unable to comprehend
as my post made clear,
that ultimate "being" is a perfect sphere or circle,
and that "becoming" is a change in this condition.
I suggest that Gisse Google "non-linearity" plus "harmonics"
and read a few of the hits to get a feel for this subject.
To help my pal Gisse understand this,
I suggest that he do a "gestalt" experiment
about a perfect wheel rolling along a perfect track,
and BANG, hitting a bump.
--
Tom Potter
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.
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