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We can all agree math is important.
I think we can all also agree solving an equation is pretty damn boring.
so like yeah and stuff.
I think we can all also agree solving an equation is pretty damn boring.
so like yeah and stuff.
#26 to #14
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keroberios (02/17/2013) [-]
I dunno. Back in High School I used to get a kick out of being able to make numbers do whatever I wanted them too. I enjoyed math and physics primarily for the purpose of solving the equations. And when you start to understand it all you see the world a little different.
I saw a car wreck the other day. Guy went off the road and rolled into the ditch. Everyone else I knew saw a horrible scene. I saw all of the beautiful math that went into applying torque to the car, twisting it over and resulting in two rolls before wrapping its self around the tree.
Math is awesome and you use it every day.
I saw a car wreck the other day. Guy went off the road and rolled into the ditch. Everyone else I knew saw a horrible scene. I saw all of the beautiful math that went into applying torque to the car, twisting it over and resulting in two rolls before wrapping its self around the tree.
Math is awesome and you use it every day.
Indeed. Conversely, anything that moves is technically time traveling by fractions of fractions of nanoseconds.Simply by taking a step foward I have actually time traveled in the slightest way.
But what I'm really trying to say is that I want to fuck Pocahontas. ;)
But what I'm really trying to say is that I want to fuck Pocahontas. ;)
Anything that doesn't move is traveling through time also. At a constant velocity of 1 second/second in the " future" direction.
Although I can't actually think of anything that doesn't move, given that the Earth and the Sun and all known objects in space are basically in perpetual motion.
Although I can't actually think of anything that doesn't move, given that the Earth and the Sun and all known objects in space are basically in perpetual motion.
Well, it has to do with the relation between space and time (Special relativity ring a bell). Gravity distorts time, so as you move away from gravity, the faster time goes on the massive object seems to go relative to you. So if you could travel for 10 years and travel x number of miles away from earth, the amount of time that you've been away from Earth would be significantly more than how much you aged for instance. Theoretically, you could do a 10 year mission and come back 100 years in the future.
heh... cumming... that does actually make sense though. Have you heard the theory that if the universe every "crunched" back into its super-dense per-bigbang form that time would actually reverse in the process?
also I don't think those laws existed yet. so we're good!
also I don't think those laws existed yet. so we're good!
Well at those densities and temperatures, the laws of physics breakdown. For instance, when Hydrogen is heated to hyper-extreme temperatures under extreme pressure, it turns into a sort of solid type material. Basically, there so many atoms all trying to move so much that they can't move at all.