Due to infinity hat and some related issues, the Riemann hypothesis is false. See for yourself in my nice paper:
Fractional Distance: The Topology of the Real Number Line with Applications to the Riemann Hypothesis
https://vixra.org/abs/1906.0237
Stupid criticisms:
1) Definitions 2.1.1 and 2.1.2 comprise a circle because the range of the Euclidean metric could be taken as R instead of N or Q, and despite the fact that the line being equipped with "a function" does not depend on the function's range, be it R, Q, N, or any other thing.
2) The neighborhood of infinity is not allowed by the field axioms which did not exist until long after Hilbert's 1899 paper.
3) The neighborhood of infinity is not allowed by the 1872 Dedekind cut and Cauchy definitions which somehow constrain Riemann's 1859 hypothesis.
4) Although algebra is called the study of mathematical symbols and the rules for manipulating them, infinity hat is "magic," not mundane, and therefore it is not allowed.
5) The Archimedes property of real numbers is not what Euclid said it is. It is what Rudin says it is.
6) By the axiom that every real number is less than some natural number, every real number is less than some natural and, therefore, alternative axiomatic schemes are not admissible. The main point of the paper is to show that the modern schemes for R such as the field axioms and Dedekind cuts do not preserve the traditional Euclidean construction of R.
7) Although all the sentences in the paper contain the formal subject-predicate construction, the sentences are actually incomprehensible gibberish.
8) Although Clay explicitly rules out the trivial zeros at the negative integers, zeros which everyone knows are out of scope, they also ruled out the zeros in the neighborhood of infinity but they just didn't do it explicitly like they did with the negative even integers.
Who will add to the 762? Anything I forgot?
Anonymous
>>12817337 I read your website, have you tried Debian? Sorry if it's a bit off-topic.
Anonymous
>>12817337 Thank you for making my day, Tooker. That's a good meme.
Anonymous
Anonymous
Thanks Tooker, great thread. Unironically. Also, I like your website---it's a cool idea. Have you considered a table of contents to more easily read the information?
Anonymous
>>12817337 Dude don't you realize that if the Reimann Hypothesis could be proven in 10 pages of algebraic manipulations it would've been solved 150 years ago
Anonymous
>>12817369 He has attempted to disprove it, you fool!
Anonymous
>>12817371 and in 141 pages, not 10.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817371 >>12817379 oh yeah shit you're right hang on tooker lemme go grab your millions real quick
Anonymous
>>12817337 Besides this guy's horseshit what real progress has been made on the RH
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817387 It's been proven true. Someone posts the proof on here from time to time.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817387 be nice to tooker. redirect the aggression to the new village punching bag
>>12813430 Anonymous
>>12817346 >>12817358 >Tooker's website Could you share the link?
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>12817514 that seems sketchy
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817357 That's a great read.
Anonymous
El Arcón
>>12817346 I did try Debian but it just told me that I don't have an ethernet card and that it couldn't detect my wifi card.
>>12817350 good find. I meant that I'm going to declare war on the USA as soon as I am able and that I will never accept a position subservient to the civilian government upon which I desire to make war. Here is that paper I mentioned:
http://762com.com/d0cs/papers/On_Certain_Aspects_of_American_Economics_Relevant_to_2021__v1-20210301.pdf >>12817358 I have considered that in the form of some system of linking posts by their content but I determined that the cost of the complexity of the HTML was too high. I think it is optimal for me to write the scrolls from bottom to top, and from left to right, and then to store them once they become long.
>>12817369 >>12817379 I can do it in less than one page, pic related.
El Arcón
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817601 >I can do it nooooooooo you cant
Anonymous
>>12817337 Infinity doesn’t have a neighborhood, Jon. The definition is a contradiction. So your proof is wrong, QED.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817616 okay i lol'd at this one.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817601 >infinity is a point TIL.
Lol you just made another zero.
Anonymous
>>12817668 What? The neighborhood of infinity is used outside of tooker's papers, dude.
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>12817694 Infinity is not part of the set of complex numbers which is the domain of zeta, dude
El Arcón
>>12817668 I am not the inventor of the neighborhood of infinity and I do not claim to be. I came across the term "neighborhood of infinity" while I was studying the pic related online notes for MIT's undergraduate complex analysis curriculum. My original scholarly contribution to the field was only to invent a notation useful for describing numbers in that neighborhood and then to develop some applications for my notation.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817772 But zeta is a C function. Infinity not in C.
El Arcón
>>12817751 inf_hat is not in the domain. I agree. However, x=inf_hat-1 is in the domain in the same way that x=pi-1 is in the domain [0,pi).
For example, consider the set S={1,2,3,4,5} and the number x=7-4. Is x in S? Yes obviously x is in S even though 7 is not in S. Is that too complicated for you? Or will you just refuse to understand that x=7-4 can be a member of {1,2,3,4,5} even while 7 is not in S?
Anonymous
>>12817788 Sorry for bad English, but “7-4” is just a rewrite of a member of the set. Infinity isn’t. Can’t be in neighborhood of something not in set.
Anonymous
>>12817788 All you prove is in some set we can’t define RH is false. Ok. Looking for general proof.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817724 >not showing the eyepatch for ARRRR hat Anonymous
>>12817812 Correct, Tooker has proved for some set, Rhat, that RH is false. That much I think is airtight. The real question is whether Tooker's construction of Rhat is isomorphic to the ordinary Reals. I'm inclined to say no, but I can be persuaded otherwise.
Anonymous
>>12817772 In this sense of using 'neighborhood of infinity,' there is no distinguishing between infinity and minus infinity. The complex plane is "compactified" by adjoining a single point, called infinity, and then defining a topology on the union of the complex plane with infinity. The resulting topological space is homeomorphic to a sphere, and it ceases to have meaningful algebraic structure.
You, on the other hand, try to do nonsense arithmetic with infinity and minus infinity.
Dedicate a year of your life to properly understand real and complex analysis, and you will understand why your proof doesn't work.
Of course it's easier to continue in your vague, nebulous, and slippery reasoning.
El Arcón
>>12817806 "inf_hat minus one" is just a rewrite of a member of R in the way that "seven minus four" is a rewrite of a member of S. In the way the membership of "pi minus one" in [0,pi) is not affected by pi not being in [0,pi), neither is the membership of "inf_hat minus one" in R affected by the non-membership of inf_hat in R.
>>12817788 >Or will you just refuse to understand Anonymous
>>12817832 but anon, you can do the same thing with R. Call it, say, a Riemannian circle.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projectively_extended_real_line Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817837 See
>>12817832 we’re saying same thing
Anonymous
>>12817827 He can’t even show it’s a field, much less isomorphic to any other field. See
>>12817832 El Arcón
>>12817827 I disagree with your assertion regarding the real question. The real question is whether or not inf_hat sheds the desired light on the problem about prime numbers which made the Riemann hypothesis famous. Whether or not R_hat is in R will never be more than an argument over whether Euclid is the owner of the symbol R forever of if other people can steal it from him. That will never be something other than a matter of opinion.
>>12817832 >using 'neighborhood of infinity,' there is no distinguishing between infinity and minus infinity. Yes, it does not work for plane polar coordinates, based kindergarten anon. If you use Cartesian coordinates to define r=sqrt{x^2+y^2}, then it works fine, based kindergarten anon.
>nonsense arithmetic I do not agree with your assertion that using Cartesian coordinates instead of polar is well classified as "nonsense arithmetic."
>>12817857 >He can’t even show it’s a field This is true but when you phrase it like that, it's like you're trying to distract from the fact that I did affirmatively show that it is not a field.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817848 I know but the same issue arises. The real line union infinity has the topology of the circle, but the addition and multiplication structure on the real line do not extend to one for the circle.
The circle DOES have a natural group structure (the multiplicative group of complex numbers with absolute value 1), but it doesn't arise in this way.
El Arcón
>>12817871 >problem about prime numbers I have shown that numbers in the neighborhood of infinity have slightly different arithmetic than numbers in the neighborhood of the origin, particularly with the non-uniqueness of quotients. Since for prime numbers P, numbers of the form inf_hat-P have same distribution as P, anything we can learn about the former will necessarily tell us about the latter. Everyone who says
>No >let's categorically reject the neighborhood of infinity without even 50 years of study >and instead we'll just keep banging our heads against the neighborhood of the origin >like we did for the last 150 years of working on RH. >That will be better >even though 150 years and the entire careers of hundreds of geniuses >couldn't convince us that the neighborhood of the origin is insufficient >we can already tell that the neighborhood of infinity insufficient >and no one should even think about it because it's obviously wrong >and it's better if everyone keeps looking near the origin reveals themselves as someone whose opinion is not respectable.
Anonymous
>>12817921 don't worry man, after you're dead in 2082, you'll posthumorously be awarded credit for cracking this mystery once someone steals your idea, and one of our based children reveals to the world you figured it out first.
El Arcón
>>12817931 All the people who prioritized the security of my enemy the USA over their scientific work so that they withheld results which would have vindicated and confirmed my theories years ago are going to find out that whatever negative outcome they were hoping to avoid by withholding their results would have been preferable in hindsight to the negative outcome which came from their demonstration of fealty to my enemy.
Anonymous
>>12817950 And this story equivalence applied to what universal set of morals or ethics?
El Arcón
>>12817954 If going against the Devil resulted in a worse outcome than going against God, the collected wisdom of eternity would say that the fear of the Devil is the beginning of knowledge.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817337 How well does Tooker's infinity hat measure up against his infinite rebuttals and refutations? Wouldn't eventually his infinity hat overflow? Or is filling his infinity hat with said rebuttals and refutations a form of OCD that he refuses to address in an objective way?
Anonymous
>>12817962 So God is just a big provider of warnings but one can't ever be sure of those warnings and they are never anything beyond an opinion expressed by a source sought by the questioner?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817387 there hasn't really been any major progress since deligne proved the weil conjectures in the 70's. RH is completely intractable at the current state of mathematics now and probably for the near forseeable future.
El Arcón
>>12817970 God is not *just* that. God was the winner of a war that was far more terrible than you could ever imagine,
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817982 But God can't lose any war of any category so technically to God any war is on par with breathing manually given how effortlessly my infinite lungs breath in and out in parallel.
Anonymous
>>12817982 Man why do schizos always believe in God? Robert Sapolsky believes it's because schizotypals invented religion.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4WwAQqWUkpI Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12818000 It satisfies their narcissistic need for circular reasoning and validation. It just means they use the word God as some unimodular variable.
Anonymous
>>12818000 Yes, which is why they hate science because it takes away their authority. Exactly what Tooker is doing.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12818008 Distributed authority sometimes takes too long to converge within a meaningful timeframe.
>Dons the infinite hat of Tooker fandom Anonymous
>>12817668 >>12817751 >>12817806 I'm sorry to inform you, but you're a massive brainlet. neighborhood of infinity is a standard thing, see
https://proofwiki.org/wiki/Definition:Neighborhood_of_Infinity the term itself is fine, it's Tooker's interpretation that's wrong
Anonymous
Tooker you should start an onlyfans.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12818250 Holy shit, yes. I'm in. Do sailor moon cosplay with an infinity hat! I would spend $20 a month to see Tooker do this shit. I would be his most AVID fan and GREATEST PROMOTER ever!
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12818250 Do it fucking naked, Tooker. So sayeth the Lord.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12818250 I wanna see that man slather himself with butter while teaching his infinity hat mathematics class.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12818250 Holy shit yes. He's the only OnlyFans patron I'd support.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
WHY DOESN'T TOOKER DO VIDEO LECTURES!!!!
Anonymous
Quoted By:
TUCKER MAKE VIDEOS FOR US
Anonymous
Quoted By:
he should be making videos like wildberger
El Arcón
>>12818164 This is exactly the interpretation that I use: the one from your link.
Anonymous
>>12818164 I’m not saying it doesn’t exist, fuckwit. I’m saying he can’t use it for that.
Anonymous
>>12817668 >>12819166 >Infinity doesn’t have a neighborhood, Jon. The definition is a contradiction Anonymous
>>12819094 >>12818164 That’s NOT how you’re using it. By that definition not everything vanishes in your equation. 1/1 =/= 0
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12819195 then you're excused. the poster I quoted is a brainlet though.
Anonymous
>>12817337 QM is just all made up. It literally came out of schrodingers ass.
Anonymous
>>12819363 David Bohm gives a wonder heuristic argument for why the wave equation has to exist in the form it does. He's careful to say it cannot be derives, but he also argues that no other form of it can exist as they're ruled out. The equation had to exist as it is, Schrodinger merely discovered it.
Anonymous
>>12819166 >I’m not saying it doesn’t exist >>12817668 >Infinity doesn’t have a neighborhood Anonymous
>>12819195 curious then how the discussion flows so naturally assuming it was you.
Anonymous
for the record I find Tooker and his fellow schizos incomparably more aggravating than all haplo- and IQposters combined.
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>12819456 Tooker is my favorite schizo. He actually formalizes his arguments and you can have a decent conversation with him. The reason people can pick out precisely what they disagree with when it comes to Tooker is that he takes the time to actually communicate what he means. Other schizos don't do that.
Anonymous
>>12819487 I tried to communicate with him in the beginning (I mean when I stumbled upon this place; he was obviously a regular feature here by that time). it was one of the infinity-hat episodes. my experience was that he does not acknowledge counterarguments he has no answer for. and this kind of selective editing of the world feels too much like unfair play.
Anonymous
>>12819439 where can I find more details about this argument? google has let me down.
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>12817601 >I did try Debian but it just told me that I don't have an ethernet card and that it couldn't detect my wifi card. Try the nonfree debian iso, your wifi and ethernet cards must have proprietary drivers that Fabian excludes from the default repo.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12819814 thanks, will check.
El Arcón
>>12819194 >That’s NOT how you’re using it. As the author of my own work, I can give you a 100% assurance that that is how I'm using it.
>>12819439 >as opposed to doing something for which a scientist might have garnered high praise >Schrodinger merely discovered an equation which has been getting used a million times a day for 100 years >>12819733 I find that these people who fault me for selectively acknowledging arguments can never post an argument that I will selectively choose not to acknowledge. The only posts I ignore are ones where people type some diminutive variant of my name in their post. I won't entertain the diminutive form of address.
>>12819852 I am quite happy with KDE Neon and I have like Ubuntu Unity in the past as well.
Anonymous
>>12819450 >>12819445 Not the same anon. I think that guy is ESL.
Anonymous
>>12820047 I know that’s what you think, but if you were right you would have a Fields Medal and you don’t.
El Arcón
>>12820172 Fields medals are awarded according to the opinions of the members of the Fields committee. I think one of the main reasons you all sedated and kidnapped me to bring me to Antarctica where you would then incessantly rape and torture me hoping that I would kill myself is because you know the Fields committee does not consider works posted on the internet in Antarctica and you were deliberately sabotaging my well deserved Fields medal, and my well deserved Nobel prize, and other things as well.
Anonymous
>>12820172 That's not a very good argument though. Tooker is right that its a politicized thing and they wouldn't award it to a paper on viXra.
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12820168 we should not be guessing at identities anyway here. there's a reason 'namefag' is - or used to be -an insult.
Anonymous
>>12817337 If you’ve disproved RH, can you provide a non-trivial zero with real part not 1/2?
You could state that zero and be done with it. Don’t even need a whole paper.
Anonymous
>>12820507 might be a non-constructive proof. it very likely isn't a correct proof at all, but inability to present a specific root is no counterproof either.
Solivagus
Quoted By:
>>12820047 >I won't entertain the diminutive form of address. The thing that I share in common with Tooker.
Anonymous
>>12820193 take your meds (unironically)
Anonymous
>>12820212 Bullshit, perelman never published his work, he only uploaded it to arxiv and basically called every mathematician a cucklord faggot and told them to go fuck themselves and he won a fields medal. In math the only thing that matters is if you are correct.
Solivagus
Quoted By:
>>12820617 (+1) is an inexhaustible function set, that contains at least the validator of (n+1=2) for when (n=1), which happens only through a one-way trapdoor function when the recursive base case of (n-1=0) as the only n value that would satisfy the above equation is 1.
Identifiers and categories can be whatever the preferred equations are at that point.
>Memory of Integrity Solivagus
Just brushing up on my, "It was me, the whole time! All along!" language style. Tooker-senpai does a great job of being THE asshole that wanted to be a God that continued suffering, all because of some magical infinity hate religious law that we're not following and he's all butthurt about.
Solivagus
It is also fun to interpret Tooker's posts as a young girl screaming to every person they can, "NOBODY IS AS IMPORTANT AS ME! I AM SOOO FUCKING IMPORTANT!" It conjures up in my mind a hilarious state of affairs with the world.
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>12820523 This whole thread is non-constructive
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12821106 Oddly sacrificial perspective you have there.
Anonymous
>>12817337 Just one man goes where nobody yet dared to venture.
Oh wait, MOG and MOND are already a thing, huh.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12818008 I believe in God and love science just like the philosophers and mathematicians of the Islamic golden age. If you can do both then you can really gain some knowledge, without God scientists stop questioning their assumptions. Oftentimes atheists project this onto believers, but if you actually look at the attitudes towards knowledge atheists are much more self righteous.
Anonymous
>>12821275 The a priori case and equivalence auditor. How strange to see you here. Why have you chosen to pass universal judgement on 4chan in such harsh a way as to prevent curing l disease and desperation but enable your opinion as the superior one to move forward with?
Anonymous
>>12821350 It's not universal, I addressed OP's pic. It's not harsh, just snippish.
It's not my opinion, it's fact.
Anonymous
>>12821357 Thank you for your irrevocable intelligence and how it was forced upon me so that I may now better.
Anonymous
>>12821363 It wasn't forced, it was provided.
It wasn't intelligent, I merely copied.
You won't better yourself, you're on 4channel.
Anonymous
>>12821372 That last hurdle is always the one I get surprised they still use. If one can improve anywhere then it is up to how the individual learns and translates said learnings.
Adaption. Translation. Phase.
>Recent pic of me because 4chan has always been my dojo anyway. Anonymous
>>12821372 >>12821393 Then again how much superiority should one ever be able to express? There should be a systemic limit to enable complexity sharing and flow.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12821372 >>12821393 >>12821395 Or fuck all of you anyway. Ultimately so long as the words and images are viewed it is sufficient for this language of sublimation to work like it did in my first victim.
El Arcón
>>12820617 >In math the only thing that matters is if you are correct. No, this is profoundly wrong. it matters more than that if the government sends you to a black site prison in Antarctica where they have constructed a mock-up of the USA in which they can ensure the total failure of all of your efforts. Being right or wrong literally doesn't matter at all if you're in the Antarctica slave hole, which I am, as are most if not all of you. Perelman was able to upload to arXiv because he was not on the black site Antarctica only internet. For me, this is not result I could get onto arXiv, no matter how well written and perfectly correct my paper is. Being right or wrong has nothing to do with it, and if you browse arXiv you will see that they accept and publish absolute dog shit five days a week and have been doing so for very many years.
>>12820507 >>12820523 .
The formal construction by Cauchy sequences and the formal evaluation of RZF by limits of Cauchy equivalence classes appears in the OP paper.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12821459 That story element substitution.
Anonymous
>>12821459 Perelman was able to upload to arxiv because he was a genius able to solve one of mathematics 7 hardest problems.
You on the other hand...
Anonymous
Tooky, do you have any idea of how big the primes need to be to the RH break?
El Arcón
>>12821703 I believe that if Perelman had been kidnapped and sedated and thrown into the Antarctica slave hole, and had he subsequently tried to upload his paper to arXiv from Antarctica, he would not have been able.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12821880 I believe that you are norwood stage 6
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12821963 Tootsie, don't ignore me :(
Anonymous
>>12821706 It only works if they are evaluated as a limit approaching infinity so that he can handwave the division into 0 despite the numerator being nonzero.
El Arcón
>>12822168 The only hand waving about that quotient is your refusal to acknowledge my proof of that operation's well definition. Furthermore, it is your own hand waving that you don't acknowledge the robust character of my analytical technique in which I have by produced several proof that RH is false, and only the second one depends on the quotient of two non-zero real numbers being equal to zero. For instance, the proof in pic does not depend on that operation.
El Arcón
Quoted By:
>>12822255 >my proof of that operation's well definition. El Arcón
Quoted By:
>>12822255 >proof in pic does not depend on that operation. also this one doesn't
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12819481 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlm1aajH6gY Riemann Hypothesis proof all trivial zeros on the 1/2 line, but never proved true (Riemann was Euler's student). lots of physics assumes it's true, would have implications on many thangs
>t. pleb Anonymous
>>12817337 >El Arcón Does this tard ever take a break or is he spamming his schizobabble 24/7?
Anonymous
>>12822255 dude you need to retake Calc 1 and Linear Algebra
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12823061 Tell him what's wrong. All this sounds like is
>I feel threatened so I'll just call him stupid El Arcón
Quoted By:
>>12823061 You suggest that there is some technical problem in my paper which attributable to some lack of mastery on my part over the rudiments of an undergraduate math curriculum but you do not cite the problem because no such problem exists. Any attempt to do so would only reveal the foolishness that complements your wickedness.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12820739 >>12820750 Why do you think tooker's signature is "the acorn"? Because he's a nut and he knows it
Anonymous
>>12822612 He shit posts 24/7 until he is banned. That's the only break he gets. Please report all of his posts so he is banned quickly and we can move on
Anonymous
>>12823599 what rules are he breaking? take your SJW cancel bullshit back to r*ddit and twatter
El Arcón
>>12823618 Usually I get banned for ban evasion without a preexisting ban in place.
Anonymous
Two questions for Tooker: 1. Is the modern Cauchy-sequence real numbers? 2. The interest in the standard RH mainly consists of a bunch of corollaries; most memorably, it is equivalent to a statement about the distribution of primes. Does your disproof of RH over shed any light on the prime distribution?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12824107 This is because you’re evading a future ban. It is tachyonic ban evasion.
El Arcón
>>12824587 >1. Is R0 the modern Cauchy-sequence real numbers? In my formulation, R_0 is a Cartesian product of zero with the set of all Cauchy "equivalence classes" of Cauchy sequence of rationals.
You will recall that Cantor's definition of R deals with equivalence classes of Cauchy sequences as opposed to the sequences themselves. I assume this is what you mean and I won't resort to mocking you for referring to the idea informally and then refuse to answer you citing the imperfection of your question. Unlike my most people, when I read something I give the author the benefit of the doubt about knowing what they are talking about unless it is obvious they don't. Most people read what I write with the intention not understand it which would be like me saying I don't understand your question because you refer to a Cauchy sequence definition of R but not the Cauchy equivalence class.
If you would have read OP paper instead of asking me what is in it, you would see that my framework relies on a modification of Cantor's Cauchy equivalence class such that real numbers are the Cartesian product of two equivalence classes of sequences of rationals: one specifying the neighborhood and one specifying the member of the neighborhood. The "zero" in R_0 tells us that the numbers in R_0 are constructed from Cauchy equivalence classes as the Cartesian product of zero with the set of Cauchy equivalence classes. Please read the paper. It is quite formal. Also, when (if?) you respond, perhaps you will say a little about why you are interested enough in my research to ask me about but not interested enough to read the report I wrote about it. The meaning of pic axiom 4.2.7 is that the given Cartesian product with zero is an identity operation.
El Arcón
>>12824587 >second question I am not well versed in modern mathematics and my mathematical ability is mostly confined to mathematical methods for physicists, meaning calculus and non-abstract algebra, and even then I shy away from matrix algebra because it seems unnecessarily complicated to me to write systems of equations that way. I have never worked through the proof of the prime number theorem and I have never taken the time to see what the point of Riemann's 1859 paper was, and I don't know the connection of RH to the primes other than something in the Euler product. Even if I did, I have no background in number theory and I can't say the problem is very interesting for me. What are the applications? I have no interest in cryptography and the physical application in quantum gases and the phonon spectrum of crystalline spheres is a little to niche for me, even in physics.
I only picked up RH because I was about to become homeless and I was thinking about the $1M. At some point, I may work through Riemann's paper to see if I can plug infinity hat into it directly but I've been procrastinating doing so and I expect to continue to procrastinate that during the near future. As I mentioned above, however, numbers in the neighborhood of infinity have slightly different arithmetic than numbers in the neighborhood of the origin so we may be able to use those tools to learn something about the distribution of numbers in the form
Anything new we could learn about that distribution would necessarily tell us about the distribution of the primes because that is the same distribution. If I was a number theorist, I would probably rewrite all of those corollaries you mention relative to inf_hat and then proceed from there. Since my solution to RH turned into the logo for John Titor, you can be pretty sure than my solution does everything that is expected of a solution to RH.
El Arcón
Anonymous
tooker what's your MBTI type?
El Arcón
>>12824836 I don't recall. IN-something.
Anonymous
>>12824844 What do you think of Terrence Howard’s contributions?
El Arcón
Anonymous
Quoted By:
Doubles only? You are not yet strong in the kek.
El Arcón
Anonymous
>>12824766 Thank you, Tooker. As you have given me such an extensive answer, I will explain why I asked my questions.
I have at one point tried reading your paper defining . My conclusion was that, although the presentation was maybe overly length (at least to the point were I didn't have the time to work through the whole thing), the underlying mathematics may well be sound.
Assuming it is sound, your definition is interesting as an interpretation of the informal concept the pre-1872 informal concept of real numbers.
However, I think your interpretation is wrong -- the formula for the prime counting function that Riemann derived involves sums over all critical-strip zeroes of the zeta functions, specifically
were goes over zeros on the critical strip. If we include your zeroes here, the sum diverges badly, as each term is infinite. Clearly, Riemann was not working with a real number concept including these zeroes.
For this reason, I am not motivated enough to read your full theory, but I respect the work.
El Arcón
>>12825010 Well, I should say that since all primes are in the neighborhood of the origin, and it proven that there an infinite number of primes, it makes perfect sense that the prime counting function diverges in the neighborhood of infinity. This is a feature of the framework, not a bug. If the prime counting function did not diverge evaluated at x in the neighborhood of infinity, meaning that said there were only a finite number of primes less than x, that would be a *HUGE* problem because it is obviously wrong. I hope you realize the when the prime counting function diverges evaluated at a number in the number of infinity, that is telling us that there are an infinite number of primes in the neighborhood of the origin. This is the correct behavior for the prime counting function because there an infinite number of primes in the neighborhood of the origin. Could you say what you think the problem is?
Also, I recommend OP paper as my source of record. The "Real Numbers in the Neighborhood of Infinity" was a first go at formalizing the system of numbers and it has a lot of features that are not desirable, which can be considered bugs. The fractional distance paper reflects a couple of years work refining the idea, and the formal rigor is out of the ball park with respect to my first attempt at rigor.
Anonymous
>>12825044 The sum appears as a constant in the expression for Riemanns prime-counting function (see here
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prime-counting_function#Formulas_for_prime-counting_functions )
It always goes over all zeroes, even if our x is in the neighborhood of 0 -- so the prime-counting function would diverge even for, say, x=2.
El Arcón
Quoted By:
>>12825060 >so the prime-counting function would diverge even for, say, x=2. I see you have a claim here. I assume your claim would fail due to the cancellation of two infinities, or something. You should support your claim with evidence. If you demonstrate a problem rather than claiming one exists without showing it, then I will closely examine your derivation of a contradiction. I do concede a priori that Riemann's prime function cannot break in a valid solution to RH.
El Arcón
Quoted By:
>>12825010 >>12825060 For instance, in my memory of seeing terms of the form "sum over logarithmic integrals of rho" as they relate to the RZF, there usually appears a second "sum of logarithmic integrals of one minus rho" and we could probably use
to fix the problem.
El Arcón
unrelated posted for posterity
Anonymous
>>12825116 What was your specialty in before getting fired from your PhD? How deep did you get?
El Arcón
>>12825151 I got fired from my PhD twice actually, only the second time I also got expelled from college. I went to grad school because I did not want to get a job after finishing college and I did not understand that your advisor will just make you work on his grant and that you can't pick your thesis topic.
I did have the big idea for my first paper after some talks I went to in grad school but mostly I was just living off my student loans and fucking around. I figured I would have a big discovery and be a famous scientist or else I would not work in physics with my PhD and there was no reason to try to build up any relationships from which I could get post-doc recommendations. I did have a big discovery but the government tried to anally rape me to death and will soon plead with me not to kill their children for it.
I was really into learning and doing the work it in my undergrad but I was not really with the program in grad school. At Georgia Tech there were *ZERO* profs working on anything I was interested in and they did not offer even one semester of either QFT or GR during the entire five years I was there. Basically, all they do is train electronics technicians and I have *ZERO* interest in being an electronics technician. If I had put some research into what grad school was like, this would not have surprised me but my main intention in going to grad school was not to have to get a job (and then also to be qualified for jobs which require a PhD which are more palatable to me.) I did have a feeling, however, that if I pursued physics I could be the greatest physicists of all time but, as a matter of practicality, the main thing I was doing was avoiding having to go be an office cuck which is literally my worst nightmare for potential life outcomes. I do honestly see ending in a dungeon getting tortured for however many years as a better outcome than being an office cuck. If I end up in the dungeon, that means at least I tried.
El Arcón
Quoted By:
>>12825151 Also relevant to your inquiry:
John Titor, the Montauk Project, the e-Cat and Geometric Unity
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread966329/pg1 Anonymous
>>12820047 >>Schrodinger merely discovered an equation which has been getting used a million times a day for 100 years Citation needed. No one has ever used schrodingers equation for anything practical.
El Arcón
>>12825253 I think transistors run on Schrodinger's equation.
Anonymous
>>12825229 >I got fired from my PhD twice actually, only the second time I also got expelled from college What happened?
El Arcón
>>12825258 The first time a female prof was being a cunt. The second time two female students were being cunts.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12825257 >I think transistors run on Schrodinger's equation Is this a troll? Transistor are designed with solid state physics not quantum physics.
Anonymous
>>12825265 That's rough buddy. That's why I refused to make any physical moves on any girls in grad school, whether they be undergrads or graduates. I did go on a couple dates with some former students, but I also refused to escalate out of fear of what happened to you would happen to me. MGTOW is the only safe approach.
El Arcón
>>12825309 Living safely is not in my set of interests.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817369 lol, anon I can't even.
Anonymous
Solivagus
>>12825479 Is your erection attention based or something there, Tooker?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12825229 Thanks for this.
Anonymous
Solivagus
Quoted By:
>>12826291 *shrug* I can't even get Tooker to stay out of my dungeon no matter how harshly I eject him. Best of luck to you, anon!
Anonymous
>>12825479 you misspelled sanely
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12826488 >insane Probably what the ancient Buddhist monks though when Europeans arrived and wanted to climb that-there-mountain.
Deluded and lacking self preservation for some irration belief of grandeur...just like Spartans...or elon musk leaving for mars...whatever fits better for you.
El Arcón
>>12826255 Your people suffer for this.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12825010 Tooker confirmed for correct?
Anonymous
Tooker is a brainlet and so is anyone who reads his "work" and can't immediately see that. The fact /sci/ entertains his shizoposting endlessly makes me think you're all either larping as intelligent or are so bored you'd do the online equivalent to listening to your local crackhead talk about that time he fucked an alien
Solivagus
>>12826893 I dunno Tooker. I simply enjoy that you are different and use passionate language, which makes you no different than any e-thot or attention, except you're a dude and into mathematics.
desu though a lot of your posts could easily be just advanced chatbot stuff as all your argumentation centres itself around elementary pedantry. Also seems like Tooker absorbs the attention like mana until he can cast some high level holy righteous spell because his infinity hat is fucking worthless beyond an attention trick.
Solivagus
Quoted By:
>>12828600 I do it to stimulate the community.
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>12817337 This is what women think of you Tooker.
Thoughts?
Anonymous
>>12828832 tooker what did you do
Solivagus
Quoted By:
>>12828832 Woah, hold on there. You care what women think about you? As in allow their thoughts, feelings, and opinions actually influence you?
Quantum Omega 3 Fish Oil Crystals
>>12828832 >what women think Would you like to buy some essential oils?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12828934 What about healing crystals or emotion-based communication that never is present in the moment and always fuelled by some non-localisable bullshit that happened elsewhere and has no relevance to the here and now?
El Arcón
>>12828860 I didn't open the door when the cops knocked on it at the abandoned house I was squatting in.
Anonymous
>>12829675 and they called the swat team for that? fuck cops. You were done dirty mate. Did you serve any jail time?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817555 mentions atlanta a lot. must be him
El Arcón
>>12829690 I am in jail even now.
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817337 stop vandalizing the MARTA you schizo fuck
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>12829829 Very Sad
Many such cases
El Arcón
>>12830255 It will be far more sad for the people that live in the jail, and the people that built the jail, and the people who brought me to the jail, and anyone I can find in a smiling facebook pic with any of those people.
Anonymous
>>12830356 I thought you were at a black site? Did they make you take your meds?
El Arcón
>>12830357 Who told you that your family wasn't going to get tortured to death for addressing me with a phrase "your meds" and why did you believe that lie?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12830407 A mathematician of all people should favor internal consistency
Anonymous
Quoted By:
I see 2k I bump 2k
Anonymous
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12817601 >except for additive absorption Anonymous
Anonymous
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>12831788 I can't make you a sandwich, I'm not a wizard.
Anonymous
>>12831954 I feel like tooker should be on /pol/ not /sci/
El Arcón
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12832212 Nah, he's not posting political trash here.
Anonymous
>>12828832 Thought this was a gay bread at first. Now it's a nice bread.
Anonymous
Anonymous
Anonymous
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>12817601 (3) is retarded
El Arcón
>>12833223 It's not retarded. If you mean, "You didn't start from scratch by assuming nothing more than the natural numbers and the existence of their mutual ratios and then proceed to prove that the specified quotient is as it is written, and your comment about 'incomparability' (which is plainly given to expedite the presentation of the main result rather than to prove Eq. 3) is not very precise," then I would agree with you but if you think that operation is wrong, then it is you who is either a retard or like a retard.
>>12832914 If they knew how dangerous I really am, they would not write those things.
Anonymous
>>12833331 Lmao Tooker you’re a fucking savage bro. Anyways, now that you’ve disproven RH what’s next?
El Arcón
>>12833351 I wrote a paper about economics.
> On Certain Aspects of American Economics Relevant to 2021 >http://762com.com/d0cs/papers/On_Certain_Aspects_of_American_Economics_Relevant_to_2021__v1-20210301.pdf Now I'm writing a paper about the Bible. Next I will two short technical papers: one about a new result of mine constructing of C and one comparing my own analytical program to Higgs which has some insight but no new result. Then I will write a survey article about likely directions for future inquiry in the MCM. Then I will try to say something new about how the quantum Pauli algebra comes from the structure of MCM spacetime. If I remain homeless all year this year, I expect to publish a lot more than I did last year.
El Arcón
Quoted By:
>>12833331 >If they knew how dangerous I really am, they would not write those things. I meant to (you) this at
>>12828832 oops
Anonymous
>>12833406 >new result of mine constructing of C Oh I'm excited for this. I think i know what it is. Did it originate from an earlier discussion on "punctured great circle of riemannian sphere"?
El Arcón
Anonymous
>>12833406 Will there be a major crisis due to corona virus and dow will plunge again or not?
Anonymous
Quoted By:
>>12833331 No, I meant how your result only works for a made up set that isn’t isomorphic to anything we care about.
Anonymous
>>12833406 An insight is a new result imo. Spoilers?
What are you writing about the Bible? I started reading it a week ago.
El Arcón
Quoted By:
>>12833480 No. The stimulus will juice the economy. Ride the way up and then convert to TIPS when the derivative is less than 1 or, more conservatively, at second derivative = 0 on the upside.
El Arcón
Quoted By:
>>12833480 I am not convinced that COVID is real but certainly the DOW will drop. I don't know what the trigger will be. Certainly if you hear that Elizabeth Windsor died, you should stay away from the cities for a while if you want to live. The other side of that, btw, is that anyone who wants to get painlessly snuffed out in an instant can go to the cities and will most likely find salvation there.
El Arcón
Quoted By:
>>12833792 I'm writing a bible study guide for interpreting the Bible as a story about time travel. I did post my whole idea about C in the other thread. Maybe this person
>>12833431 can give you the archive?