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Yin Yang religion of wisdom, harmony
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September 05, 2015, 04:51:32 PM Last edit: October 11, 2015, 07:10:39 AM by — |
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OBAViJEST
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September 05, 2015, 09:57:26 PM |
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Uh... Do I trust maths in what regard?
Are you asking me if I believe 1+1=2?
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Vod
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Licking my boob since 1970
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September 05, 2015, 10:21:29 PM |
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Uh... Do I trust maths in what regard?
Are you asking me if I believe 1+1=2?
1+1=10, as least according to quadrillions of transactions per day...
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I post for interest - not signature spam. https://vod.fan - fast/free image sharing - coming Oct! Will Theymos finish his $100,000,000 forum before this one shuts down?
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— (OP)
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Yin Yang religion of wisdom, harmony
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September 05, 2015, 10:26:59 PM |
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Uh... Do I trust maths in what regard?
Are you asking me if I believe 1+1=2?
More or less a little more complex. If you have something with a Circumference of 40075 units that gives a Radius of 6378.13 units All good so far or? Now if you take an Arc length of 1 unit of the 40075 it gives 0.0089831627002087 of a Degree (Angle) All sweet or, good. With the above radius and degree you have a: Chord length of 0.9999999989757555 unit (a wee bit less than the arc length of 1) and Sagitta (Height) of 0.00001959822085957352 Is it a Yes or No (lets say to 6 decimal places in sagitta height)
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Wheel1312
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September 05, 2015, 10:40:28 PM |
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I'm not sure what you are talking about but everyone trusts maths just by existing otherwise nothing would make sense
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OBAViJEST
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September 05, 2015, 11:43:54 PM |
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Uh... Do I trust maths in what regard?
Are you asking me if I believe 1+1=2?
More or less a little more complex. If you have something with a Circumference of 40075 units that gives a Radius of 6378.13 units All good so far or? Now if you take an Arc length of 1 unit of the 40075 it gives 0.0089831627002087 of a Degree (Angle) All sweet or, good. With the above radius and degree you have a: Chord length of 0.9999999989757555 unit (a wee bit less than the arc length of 1) and Sagitta (Height) of 0.00001959822085957352 Is it a Yes or No (lets say to 6 decimal places in sagitta height) I'd have to say it's all circumstantial
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Lethn
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September 05, 2015, 11:58:11 PM |
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If the maths is wrong then usually it's the fault of the human being not the numbers.
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OBAViJEST
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September 06, 2015, 03:59:14 AM |
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But what about physics of other worlds? Math/science 'laws' are mostly concluded by studies done on earth, without another planet to base results against...pretty one sided if you ask me
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— (OP)
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September 06, 2015, 08:39:39 AM |
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I'm not sure what you are talking about but everyone trusts maths just by existing otherwise nothing would make sense
You know maths it is right just admit it.
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Foxpup
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Vile Vixen and Miss Bitcointalk 2021-2023
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September 07, 2015, 05:14:14 AM |
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Guys, this is the guy from the Flat Earth thread who doesn't understand how gravity works. This is relevant to the question because 6378.13 is Earth's equatorial radius in kilometres. OP is really asking "will a straight line 1 kilometre long across the Earth's surface go 1.95982208596 centimetres underground? (accurate to within 6 decimal places, or a tenth of a micron)", which is plainly false as it disregards the fact that the Earth isn't a perfect sphere, and local topography over a 1 kilometre distance will vary by much more than 1.95982208596 centimetres, let alone 0.1 microns. It is not clear what OP hopes to prove beyond his ignorance of basic science and mathematics.
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Will pretend to do unspeakable things (while actually eating a taco) for bitcoins: 1K6d1EviQKX3SVKjPYmJGyWBb1avbmCFM4I am not on the scammers' paradise known as Telegram! Do not believe anyone claiming to be me off-forum without a signed message from the above address! Accept no excuses and make no exceptions!
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SparkedDev
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September 07, 2015, 03:55:31 PM |
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Guys, this is the guy from the Flat Earth thread who doesn't understand how gravity works. This is relevant to the question because 6378.13 is Earth's equatorial radius in kilometres. OP is really asking "will a straight line 1 kilometre long across the Earth's surface go 1.95982208596 centimetres underground? (accurate to within 6 decimal places, or a tenth of a micron)", which is plainly false as it disregards the fact that the Earth isn't a perfect sphere, and local topography over a 1 kilometre distance will vary by much more than 1.95982208596 centimetres, let alone 0.1 microns. It is not clear what OP hopes to prove beyond his ignorance of basic science and mathematics.
Look at you mr walking wikipedia. As he said over time the earth has been pulled on by multiple points of gravity moon mars and the sun and other thing, what happen when you pull on a balloons sides. The magic oval happens that what.
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cakir
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★ BitClave ICO: 15/09/17 ★
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September 07, 2015, 03:57:30 PM |
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Uh... Do I trust maths in what regard?
Are you asking me if I believe 1+1=2?
1+1=10, as least according to quadrillions of transactions per day... No! (1+1=10) 2(There're 10 types of people, who knows binary and who don't.)
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| ,'#██+: ,█████████████' +██████████████████ ;██████████████████████ ███████: .███████` ██████ ;█████' `█████ #████# ████+ `████+ ████: ████, ████: .# █ ████ ;███+ ██ ███ ████ ████ ███' ███. '███, +███ #████ ,████ ████ ████ █████ .+██████: █████+ `███. ,███ ███████████████████████ ████ ████ ███████████████████████' :███ ███: +████████████████████████ ███` ███ █████████████████████████` ███+ ,███ ██████████████████████████ #███ '███ '██████████████████████████ ;███ #███ ███████████████████████████ ,███ ████ ███████████████████████████. .███ ████ ███████████████████████████' .███ +███ ███████████████████████████+ :███ :███ ███████████████████████████' +███ ███ ███████████████████████████. ███# ███. #██████████████████████████ ███, ████ █████████████████████████+ `███ '███ '████████████████████████ ████ ███; ███████████████████████ ███; ████ #████████████████████ ████ ███# .██████████████████ `███+ ████` ;██████████████ ████ ████ '███████#. ████. .████ █████ '████ █████ #████' █████ +█████` ██████ ,██████: `███████ ████████#;,..:+████████. ,███████████████████+ .███████████████; `+███████#,
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abody1233
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September 07, 2015, 04:02:49 PM |
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I click no on the vote
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— (OP)
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Yin Yang religion of wisdom, harmony
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September 08, 2015, 08:09:37 AM |
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Guys, this is the guy from the Flat Earth thread who doesn't understand how gravity works. This is relevant to the question because 6378.13 is Earth's equatorial radius in kilometres. OP is really asking "will a straight line 1 kilometre long across the Earth's surface go 1.95982208596 centimetres underground? (accurate to within 6 decimal places, or a tenth of a micron)", which is plainly false as it disregards the fact that the Earth isn't a perfect sphere, and local topography over a 1 kilometre distance will vary by much more than 1.95982208596 centimetres, let alone 0.1 microns. It is not clear what OP hopes to prove beyond his ignorance of basic science and mathematics.
If anyone is interested making a whole lot of money. Build a 1 km long pool and charge entry fee by showing of the 2 cm hump in the middle. It is truly something but careful don't overdo it building a 10 km long pool gives you a awesome 2 m mathematical certified pump. The equatorial cities Balikpapan Indonesia and Quito Ecuador are 18,293 km apart (12637 km underwater straight line) separated only by the pacific ocean which in the middle has a whopping 5508.60307 km elevation. The age of awakening.
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Gleb Gamow
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September 10, 2015, 04:25:46 AM |
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Guys, this is the guy from the Flat Earth thread who doesn't understand how gravity works. This is relevant to the question because 6378.13 is Earth's equatorial radius in kilometres. OP is really asking "will a straight line 1 kilometre long across the Earth's surface go 1.95982208596 centimetres underground? (accurate to within 6 decimal places, or a tenth of a micron)", which is plainly false as it disregards the fact that the Earth isn't a perfect sphere, and local topography over a 1 kilometre distance will vary by much more than 1.95982208596 centimetres, let alone 0.1 microns. It is not clear what OP hopes to prove beyond his ignorance of basic science and mathematics.
If anyone is interested making a whole lot of money. Build a 1 km long pool and charge entry fee by showing of the 2 cm hump in the middle. It is truly something but careful don't overdo it building a 10 km long pool gives you a awesome 2 m mathematical certified pump. The equatorial cities Balikpapan Indonesia and Quito Ecuador are 18,293 km apart (12637 km underwater straight line) separated only by the pacific ocean which in the middle has a whopping 5508.60307 km elevation. The age of awakening. How the fuck can something so simple be read five times and still tryin' get my head wrapped around it? I mean, now every time I take a sip of coffee I envision a peak in the center even when the cup is tilted. I'm pretty sure at Starbucks they charge extra for that. Wait a sec! <just thought of this prior to posting> Isn't that a lot of weight in that hump? I'm surprised gravity hasn't pulled in down, flooding the two coastal cities. Paradox?
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— (OP)
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Activity: 288
Merit: 102
Yin Yang religion of wisdom, harmony
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September 10, 2015, 08:13:05 AM |
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Guys, this is the guy from the Flat Earth thread who doesn't understand how gravity works. This is relevant to the question because 6378.13 is Earth's equatorial radius in kilometres. OP is really asking "will a straight line 1 kilometre long across the Earth's surface go 1.95982208596 centimetres underground? (accurate to within 6 decimal places, or a tenth of a micron)", which is plainly false as it disregards the fact that the Earth isn't a perfect sphere, and local topography over a 1 kilometre distance will vary by much more than 1.95982208596 centimetres, let alone 0.1 microns. It is not clear what OP hopes to prove beyond his ignorance of basic science and mathematics.
If anyone is interested making a whole lot of money. Build a 1 km long pool and charge entry fee by showing of the 2 cm hump in the middle. It is truly something but careful don't overdo it building a 10 km long pool gives you a awesome 2 m mathematical certified pump. The equatorial cities Balikpapan Indonesia and Quito Ecuador are 18,293 km apart (12637 km underwater straight line) separated only by the pacific ocean which in the middle has a whopping 5508.60307 km elevation. The age of awakening. How the fuck can something so simple be read five times and still tryin' get my head wrapped around it? I mean, now every time I take a sip of coffee I envision a peak in the center even when the cup is tilted. I'm pretty sure at Starbucks they charge extra for that. Wait a sec! <just thought of this prior to posting> Isn't that a lot of weight in that hump? I'm surprised gravity hasn't pulled in down, flooding the two coastal cities. Paradox? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fk4YqPtvJao
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kampretkabur
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September 10, 2015, 10:00:51 AM |
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math is an agreement, i dont trust it, i need it
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dragonwoman
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September 10, 2015, 10:25:12 AM |
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who would hate math???math is life...my grades are always extremely high... my highest is 75% out of 100%...75% being the passing rate...if i get lucky i would get 77 to 79 like that...hahaha.. #ihatemath..
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RealBitcoin
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September 11, 2015, 01:37:55 AM |
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I was really shitty at math in high school, i always hated it, and never realized why is it useful.
I especially was learning tons of trigonometry and calculus. I was just so fed up with it.
Then came bitcoin, and it changed my stance to maths. I just realize that its really really important. Even if i`m too dumb to understand it, somebody will, and they will do nice things with it.
Cryptography is really the saviour of privacy!
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— (OP)
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Yin Yang religion of wisdom, harmony
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September 13, 2015, 10:32:49 AM |
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I click no on the vote All cool, but a little explanation would help otherwise it's pure trolling. What about your pay-check would't you trust it?
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