Is anyone on /sci/ a freemason? I'm interested in having a place to discuss interesting topics and learn new skills from others in-person while also having opportunities to help my community. Is this basically what freemasonry is? Or will I just be surrounded by old dudes talking about the Lord?
Threads by latest replies - Page 3225
(30 replies)
(11 replies)
What age were you when you realized theology and mathematics where on the same side?
(9 replies)
Do /sci/ posters have higher estrogen levels than other boards? Would a questionnaire be able to determine this?
I am doing a study on whether estrogen and interest in STEM is related for my gender studies course
I am doing a study on whether estrogen and interest in STEM is related for my gender studies course
(13 replies)
>https://youtu.be/APrSXjku-hk
>https://youtu.be/APrSXjku-hk
>https://youtu.be/APrSXjku-hk
Ariane launch of star1 D2
>https://youtu.be/APrSXjku-hk
>https://youtu.be/APrSXjku-hk
Ariane launch of star1 D2
(14 replies)
How hard is it to learn calculus
No.13448846 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Quoted By: >>13449844 >>13451368 >>13452524 >>13453859
I’m taking pre calc and might to switch to calculus. Am I in over my head? Do I just have to focus? Any books you guys could recommend and advice?
(23 replies)
Google suggestion: American rapper
(5 replies)
I’m waiting for the novavax vaccine as it’s a traditional vaccine and not experimental gene therapy. But that could be well after the winter before it’s available.
I am 30 and other than asthma relatively healthy. I felt comfortable not getting vaccinated as I had a large chance of being asymptotic and e
An extremely small chance of dying.
I am wondering tho if the delta variant is as deadly as cnn is telling me
I am 30 and other than asthma relatively healthy. I felt comfortable not getting vaccinated as I had a large chance of being asymptotic and e
An extremely small chance of dying.
I am wondering tho if the delta variant is as deadly as cnn is telling me
(5 replies)
When will the world realize how much we can learn from Wildberger?
A beginner student can understand that the parabola
can only pass from one side of the -axis to the other side because
there are holes where the fictitious numbers would have been.
A simple drawing explains it with clarity. And consequently, those
numbers do not exist, and maths is self-contradictory.
Only idiots do not understand the deep truth passed on from Wildberger's
famous mentors, Wolfgang Mückenheim and Archimedes Plutonium. They taught
the world that if something exists, it has to be written down. For example
the number 0 exists, because it can be written as "0". In stark constrast,
there is no way to write , unless you position yourself sideways
and write an 8 instead. Therefore does not exist either.
In the research article Universal Hyperbolic Geometry, Sydpoints and Finite
Fields: A Projective and Algebraic Alternative, Universe 2018 4(1), Wildberger
creates the anecdote that Albert Einstein had one of the theorems in this
paper as his own favourite result. It is shameful that already more than a
hundred years ago, there were already people busy with stealing Wildberger's
ideas.
For these and many other reasons, we should hail Wildberger and continue to
unconditionally believe anything he says.
A beginner student can understand that the parabola
can only pass from one side of the -axis to the other side because
there are holes where the fictitious numbers would have been.
A simple drawing explains it with clarity. And consequently, those
numbers do not exist, and maths is self-contradictory.
Only idiots do not understand the deep truth passed on from Wildberger's
famous mentors, Wolfgang Mückenheim and Archimedes Plutonium. They taught
the world that if something exists, it has to be written down. For example
the number 0 exists, because it can be written as "0". In stark constrast,
there is no way to write , unless you position yourself sideways
and write an 8 instead. Therefore does not exist either.
In the research article Universal Hyperbolic Geometry, Sydpoints and Finite
Fields: A Projective and Algebraic Alternative, Universe 2018 4(1), Wildberger
creates the anecdote that Albert Einstein had one of the theorems in this
paper as his own favourite result. It is shameful that already more than a
hundred years ago, there were already people busy with stealing Wildberger's
ideas.
For these and many other reasons, we should hail Wildberger and continue to
unconditionally believe anything he says.
(800 replies)
(22 replies)
What if I told you that 7/0 is actually 7????
Would you believe me?
Would you believe me?
