2
   

Geometry and Physics

 
 
centrox
 
  1  
Reply Sat 16 Dec, 2017 12:59 pm
@TheCobbler,
TheCobbler wrote:
I do not think the decimals of Pi are random numbers or they would be different each time one would calculate the number.

That does not make any sense.
fresco
 
  2  
Reply Sat 16 Dec, 2017 03:25 pm
@centrox,
'Sense' wuld appear to be in short supply on this thread !
TheCobbler
 
  0  
Reply Mon 18 Dec, 2017 03:48 am
@centrox,
You said I said Pi was random numbers...

You misrepresented what I posted.

Could you please post where I said Pi was random numbers?
0 Replies
 
TheCobbler
 
  0  
Reply Mon 18 Dec, 2017 03:55 am
@fresco,
If you are so smart please clarify your issue with this thread.

Otherwise, it is you who is showing a lack of "sense".

Also, since when does an apostrophe equal a quotation?

Were you taught proper grammar by the a2k grammar police?

I have had it suggested I use apostrophes instead of quotes but...

These are the people who type "u 2" instead of "you too", like they are 12 year olds chatting... lol

Who can't make sense here?
fresco
 
  1  
Reply Mon 18 Dec, 2017 06:13 am
@TheCobbler,
Quote:
I had a thought...

What really is Pi?


You opened a thread with a question that an intelligent teenager can answer, (the ratio of circumference to diameter of a circle) You then attempt to couple your 'obsession with geometry' with the fact that pi turns out to be one of the infinite set of irrationals. But you show no knowledge of the mathematical meaning of 'irrational' nor that all speculation requires reference to actual or potential empirical evidence to be taken seriously. Do you think speculation based on faulty logic and lack of evidence makes 'sense'?
Those alternative non Euclidean geomeyries which have been employed in physics have not arisen from wrong ideas about 'irrationality' but from seeking models to represent spacial curvature beyond three dimensions. Their utility comes from their prediction of empirical observation.
ekename
 
  1  
Reply Mon 18 Dec, 2017 09:15 pm
@TheCobbler,
Very thought provoking thread.

Perhaps this discussion of irrational, imaginary and transcendental numbers

displays a paradoxical simultaneity that is both

much ado about e^(i*pi) + 1

and eponymous.

TheCobbler
 
  0  
Reply Tue 19 Dec, 2017 06:13 am
@fresco,
A teenager can explain pi because they can read the textbook definition. But explaining how the universe incorporates pi into its physics? No one can explain that, because it is beyond our perceptible realm.

Or do you really know all there is to know?

Your arrogance is juvenile...

You send me to a youtube video with info that if over 50 years old.

Your opinion laced with insults I would rather read Google thanks...

Do you regularly insult people to exert prowess over them?

Get help...
fresco
 
  0  
Reply Tue 19 Dec, 2017 06:44 am
@TheCobbler,
Laughing
Next !
TheCobbler
 
  0  
Reply Tue 19 Dec, 2017 07:19 am
@fresco,
That just earned you a place on my ignore list... I usually skip over them.

Content is worthless without a good attitude.

Educational management? I pity the poor suckers...
0 Replies
 
TheCobbler
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Dec, 2017 05:54 am
What a superb animation showing the indefinable expanse of our universe!
Credit: www.youtube.com/user/morn1415
https://www.facebook.com/physicsbyumer1/videos/793330724201949/

Why aren't there square planets?

Pi...
0 Replies
 
TheCobbler
 
  -1  
Reply Wed 27 Dec, 2017 05:57 am
@ekename,
Pi does equal everything, and the Fibonacci sequence is a manifestation of the inner reality of pi and our fractal universe.
0 Replies
 
 

 
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