what are the biggest copes in the various scientific disciplines?
Threads by latest replies - Page 2717
How can myocarditis be mild? Doesn’t it cause serious, lasting damage to the heart?
>atomic gardening is a thing
Kodiak Drift Edition
prev: [hot pocketed]
prev: [hot pocketed]
Covid booster shots do not make sense from a hypothetical standpoint. Once your white blood cells adapt to the Covid-19 virus there is no expiration date to that adaptation. The vaccine should only stop working if the virus mutates. And if the virus mutates causing the vaccine effectiveness to be negated then you need a *different* vaccine - not the same one, again. What is wrong with the logic here?
It's too late to save the world isn't it?
The Science of Ugliness
No.13616364 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Quoted By: >>13619609 >>13620025 >>13620039
>I'm so fucking ugly that wearing a mask has improved the way strangers treat me
>I had become used to being treated like a leper
>people actually serve me straight away when I stand at a counter instead of pretending I'm not there
Can someone explain the thought process that causes this? I understand science has proven that ugly people, and, in particular ugly men, are not trusted by the vast majority of people because of their ugliness and everyone tested shows this bias, it appears to be unconscious, this unconscious bias against us results in the ugly/attractive pay gap and all the other shit that comes with being ugly, more likely to be murdered, more likely to be killed in an accident where someone else is at fault, and etc etc. Why is this and what is causing it? And what exactly makes someone ugly, I know I'm ugly and so does everyone else but besides saying "my face is fucked look at it" I don't know how to pinpoint exactly what is the problem with my face.
In some countries ugliness and the ugly/attractiveness mental and pay gap is taken so seriously that the government will pay for cosmetic surgery so they can be accepted by their peers.
>I had become used to being treated like a leper
>people actually serve me straight away when I stand at a counter instead of pretending I'm not there
Can someone explain the thought process that causes this? I understand science has proven that ugly people, and, in particular ugly men, are not trusted by the vast majority of people because of their ugliness and everyone tested shows this bias, it appears to be unconscious, this unconscious bias against us results in the ugly/attractive pay gap and all the other shit that comes with being ugly, more likely to be murdered, more likely to be killed in an accident where someone else is at fault, and etc etc. Why is this and what is causing it? And what exactly makes someone ugly, I know I'm ugly and so does everyone else but besides saying "my face is fucked look at it" I don't know how to pinpoint exactly what is the problem with my face.
In some countries ugliness and the ugly/attractiveness mental and pay gap is taken so seriously that the government will pay for cosmetic surgery so they can be accepted by their peers.
Imagine shilling for Ivermectin when even HCQ beats it in mortality reduction.
Would RAM heatsinks reduce bit flips caused by cosmic rays?
I'm trying to self-teach myself math. I have a CS background and took a lot of math courses but didn't seriously devote myself to them at the time because I didn't see how awesome math really is. At the time I was just trying to learn what I needed to have a job. Now I have a job, and I'm really interested in math and the applications it has to other industries + philosophy of math/logic/etc.
Any opinions on how I can become good at math and topics I should learn / interesting subjects to look into?
So far I'm planning on going over these subjects in this order. I'm familiar with all of them, although I'm very rusty on them and never really understood how to do proofs / logic properly.
>1
>discrete mathematics, proofs, logic
>pre calc / algebra / trigonometry
>2
>calculus
>3
>stats
>geometry
>linear algebra
>higher levels of calc
After this I'm planning on going on to other higher level maths. Also, any opinions on this roadmap?
Any opinions on how I can become good at math and topics I should learn / interesting subjects to look into?
So far I'm planning on going over these subjects in this order. I'm familiar with all of them, although I'm very rusty on them and never really understood how to do proofs / logic properly.
>1
>discrete mathematics, proofs, logic
>pre calc / algebra / trigonometry
>2
>calculus
>3
>stats
>geometry
>linear algebra
>higher levels of calc
After this I'm planning on going on to other higher level maths. Also, any opinions on this roadmap?