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(5 replies)

Math, Boolean algebra, Transitivity

No.13535925 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Chain (for example in sudoku) is a sequence of connected implications:
x1 -> x2 -> x3 ... -> xn
Set of solutions:
1. false -> false -> ... -> false -> true -> true -> ... -> true
2. all variables equal

All other stuff you can found on a picture.

If anyone of you already seen things like that please recommend me books or links to that.

Also you can contribute to this idea, to make it more rigorous or general.
(16 replies)

Beta males get most of all the aggression from assholes

No.13532045 ViewReplyOriginalReport
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4771953/

According to our results, the beta male received 55% of aggressive behavior initiated by the alpha male. As a single target, the beta male received more aggression from the alpha male than the total number of attacks on the other 8-13 individuals. This strongly suggests that the beta male was the main target of aggression from the alpha male.
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!!ujqPq/OqEFH (64 replies)
!!ujqPq/OqEFH No.13529446 ViewReplyLast 50OriginalReport
Particles do not cross the event horizon.

The event horizon is null and thus excludes massive particles from existing there.

Time dilation for reaching the event horizon is infinite.

A world line which crosses the event horizon is a violation of relativity.

Coordinate transformations do not change the form of the physics, thus the event horizon is always null.

The interior of the black hole has more volume than a two sphere of the same radius in flat space which indicates that the interior is negatively curved.

Being positively curved on the outside and negatively curved on the inside the spacetime inverts below the event horizon.

The Schwarzschild metric is spherically symmetrical. If a spherical geometry is inverted it produces a pseudosphere which shares the same geometry as a black hole: perimeter coordinate singularity, central physical singularity. However, being one dimension greater the black hole perimeter is spherical, not circular.

The black hole interior is a white hole. Gravity on this surface is repulsive.

As particles fall into the black hole they gain energy becoming black hole like themselves.

This behavior means that the black hole is not a single horizon with a central singularity but a material object composed of a relativistic form of matter known as Asymptotic Darkness.

Asymptotic darkness may form Einstein-Rosen bridges with distant black holes. This explains black hole spin alignment in clusters and the dark matter phenomenon as the extrinsic curvature affects our universe.
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(5 replies)

Everyday analytical chemistry

No.13531832 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Brainet here.
What are some examples of analytical chemistry that brainlets do every day?
Is the use of a glucometer one of them?
(12 replies)
No.13535698 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Does the highly acclaimed science already understand the behavior of electric current, its origin and its flow?
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(21 replies)

What makes science the correct faith when there are so many?

No.13535741 ViewReplyOriginalReport
We humans have invented tens of thousands of faiths. Science is just one of them. So what makes it right?

Science says that all outcomes of science must reach a predetermined conclusion, so don't pretend science is a method and not a faith

Latest example of science's predetermined outcome requirement (tho I have a folder full of papers and caps somewhere):
https://twitter.com/MythinformedMKE/status/1428110096937230336
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(55 replies)
No.13530060 ViewReplyOriginalReport
So I am trying to wrap my brainlet around the idea that life expectancy was only 30 to 40 years till around the 1920s the way they explain it everyone just suddenly dropped dead at age 30. To me it just sounds like an excuse to be kid fuckers. Uncontacted
Tribes have old as fuck people in them. So what was the real average age of death in like the say the 1200?
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(8 replies)
No.13535030 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Is taking real analysis and abstract algebra at the same time a bad idea?
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(14 replies)
No.13535922 ViewReplyOriginalReport
So I'm a uni student in my early 20s and I didn't plan to take the vaccine soon/ in the near future. However there is a high chance that I'll be forced to take it because the local government and my university will make shit harder for the unvaccinated. I hoped that there will be at least one more semester of online classes and that I'll be able to NEET it out until more data is out and we have better statistics for each vaccine, however, all that means jack shit if I can't go to exams and pass classes. Since I live in a balkan shithole the available vaccines are AZ and Sinopharm (the chinese one). Some of the people I talk to got Pfizer but since there are chances of males in their 20s getting some sort of heart problems and Bell's palsy being a proven side-effect of it also, I decided to avoid all mRNA stuff. If I end up in the situation where I have to get jabbed I'll probably get the chinese one (inactivated virus vaccine) because it seems more like a "standard" vaccine compared to the others and because I don't want to risk AZ induced blood clots.
I want to know what anons here think of the chinese vaccine and if there is some additional info I have to consider.
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(11 replies)

Piece of brain grow eyes

No.13534666 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Blob of human brain grows functioning eyes in lab dish sparking 'horror'
>Scientists were shocked when a batch of 'mini brains' they were researching developed working eye structures that are 'light sensitive' and harbour cell types similar to those in humans
> Mini brains grown in a lab from stem cells have spontaneously developed rudimentary eye structures, scientists report in a fascinating new paper.
>A batch of mini brains grown in a lab from stem cells have spontaneously developed working eye structures.
>Two optic cups on the tiny brain organoids being grown in dishes, mirroring the development of eye structures in human embryos, Science Alert reports.
>Scientists running the experiment believe the breakthrough could help us better understand eye diseases.
>"Our work highlights the remarkable ability of brain organoids to generate primitive sensory structures that are light sensitive and harbour cell types similar to those found in the body," said neuroscientist Jay Gopalakrishnan of University Hospital Du?sseldorf in Germany.
https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/weird-news/blob-human-brain-grows-functioning-24785482

We may be able to grow copies of ourselves in the future.
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