Originally posted by Dave_97
Well I wouldn't say I like it. But I've seen it. The wife got me the shirt for Christmas. It's a. Ugly Christmas shirt.I don't know how to compare them. Mostly because it's the same three guys.
But without production value.
Wasn't aware it's the same crew, what the hell then
Can we talk about the important thing here! I can calculate the exact rate of expansion, solve the anti-matter problem, and explain quantum entanglement all with one geometric principle based on Murphy's law!
But yet, no one wants to send me a loan. Like, you can require by law I give the money back if I can't demonstrate the proofs
Originally posted by RobtardWell there's the perfect circle but that's nothing but a starting point, simple nonlinear algebra that they don't even teach in col mat 171 pre-calc
What are posting then with the pictures of the handwritten notes?
But the trick is measuring the change in the third dimension of direction using your original sphere, about the original sphere. This can express both special and general relativistic spatiotemporal changes something I coined "absolute relativity".
This can't be done with Newtonian calculus.
My third dimension is seen straight on, without an angle, so you see right through the sphere and measure the distance of it's hind-coordinates using another sphere and in doing so you create a new vector. The quantum gravity in this 'brane' topology is it's 4th dimension, at the planck scale, that is trivector, this is under m-brane theory which is not the same as brane theory or string theory. In fact, with entanglement there's as many as 8 dimensions in the trivector at the scale of the quantum foam. Which is m-brane supergravity.
Originally posted by Gojomojo
My third dimension is seen straight on, without an angle, so you see right through the sphere and measure the distance of it's hind-coordinates using another sphere and in doing so you create a new vector. The quantum gravity in this 'brane' topology is it's 4th dimension, at the planck scale, that is trivector, this is under m-brane theory which is not the same as brane theory or string theory. In fact, with entanglement there's as many as 8 dimensions in the trivector at the scale of the quantum foam. Which is m-brane supergravity.
Are you a sentient bad acid trip?
Originally posted by Gojomojo
Well there's the perfect circle but that's nothing but a starting point, simple nonlinear algebra that they don't even teach in col mat 171 pre-calcBut the trick is measuring the change in the third dimension of direction using your original sphere, about the original sphere. This can express both special and general relativistic spatiotemporal changes something I coined "absolute relativity".
This can't be done with Newtonian calculus.
So it is your works.