

CuriosOne
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Everything posted by CuriosOne
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How to Deactivate My Account??
CuriosOne replied to CuriosOne's topic in Suggestions, Comments and Support
I took a snap photo of your personal insults to me and will make sure the owners of this site see it.. -
How to Deactivate My Account??
CuriosOne replied to CuriosOne's topic in Suggestions, Comments and Support
There are posts here accusing me of being liar, one is where I told another member that sharing links to videos was against forum rules, I'm sure the rules will bend themselves again. Here is another personal insult by your members.. -
How to Deactivate My Account??
CuriosOne replied to CuriosOne's topic in Suggestions, Comments and Support
Ayy see.. -
So your saying as x-> infinity, infinity is less 1 of itself?? I speak of the concept of dx---> 5 As delta x approaches 5 but not exactly 5, where x =4.9999 I hope that made sense becuase it doesn't to me...Not even after years of rigorous caculus study..
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How to Deactivate My Account??
CuriosOne replied to CuriosOne's topic in Suggestions, Comments and Support
I was referring to the reasoning of changing my password forgetting it then walking away..... Im well aware of the voluntary participation, but was not aware of the sarcasm or indirect passive insults.. -
Why do scientist "think" they know everything??
CuriosOne replied to CuriosOne's topic in Speculations
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Both bugs and stakes, I don't understand why you mention them...Seriously what do those have todo with infinity??
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How to Deactivate My Account??
CuriosOne replied to CuriosOne's topic in Suggestions, Comments and Support
That's the funniest thing I've ever heard...- 50 replies
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Some resources dont "tell you" that the power rule "is used in "differentiation" where the coefficient acts as just a plain ole number, infact the power rule works for both negative and positive and even fractions.. x^2 = 2x^1 x^2/3 = [2/3]*x^-1/3 x = x'= 1 If a function "any function" starts with a coefficient a coefficient has "NO EFFECT" on the process of differentiation.. That's another reason why I asked, What is the point of calculus???? Were given this information by ""scientst""
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How about 4[a+b] Is 4 a coeffcient or a natural number??
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I cannot see an option in my account settings....
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My point exactly..not sure bout the bugs and snakes part
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Excuse me??? This is a mystery question, since when does mystery and science go hand in hand?? Did you ever review "your comments" on my posts?? The ones you did not read?? Where you gave advice that was totally off topic?? You asked a questions and I gave you an answer, blocking me does not change my answer, it just shows "political correctness" which "validates my posts...
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Anything with a radius, is pi , becuase remember units are man made systems, so length is time, and time is bundles of loops that repeat indefinitely...Why? Becuase infinity is a concept, so the concept is the model itself as a volume of probable outcomes. Thats why pi and r work so well together, "it's a real shame that's never talked about." Science is so occultic that way..
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All I is see is pi ratio, pi ratio, pi ratio..
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Understood, but can infinity be represented by a number such as pi ratio, or an irrational constant of some sort? There may be scientific evidence of such..
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To start off: when we use 2pi*r = circumference.. Is 2 a coefficient? Or is it a natural number?
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Does Classical Gravity exist in the "atom."
CuriosOne replied to CuriosOne's topic in Quantum Theory
It's very disappointing to think a scale that small is nearly impossible...I'm sure there are other alternatives though... -
Why do scientist "think" they know everything??
CuriosOne replied to CuriosOne's topic in Speculations
Thanks for acknowledging that.. I think I just need to accept that numbers on their own "act" independent from our math concepts just as a particle acts as a wave... I can agree, but im under impression that no one really knows what numbers "represent", I've read to treat pi as a number, then I read treat pi as an exponent, then I read pi really is base 10.. Distribution and Algebrea make it worse. I'm sure other scientist had similar encounters with this situation.. -
Does Classical Gravity exist in the "atom."
CuriosOne replied to CuriosOne's topic in Quantum Theory
What is a model in scientific terms?? When i think of a model I think of: G*m1*m2/r^2 -
Does Classical Gravity exist in the "atom."
CuriosOne replied to CuriosOne's topic in Quantum Theory
Great point, I would also love to know. Even if they were real, they are believed to be "vertual" in just that fact that atoms & molecules act as waves makes it more complex, I do respect its field of study and dedication.