To: narby
It's OK if you don't understand it. We don't understand most things. Women, for example, are an example of a system in which the variables is not just infinite, but uncountable. When you can generalize beyond the specific eccentricities of the specific problem on which you are working, you can begin to understand what is happening. Otherwise, you're just dealing with life online -- that is, as it comes.
340 posted on
05/10/2005 11:46:30 AM PDT by
AmishDude
(Join the AmishDude fan club: "Very well put, AD. As usual." -- Howlin; "ROFL!" -- Dan from Michigan)
To: AmishDude
Are you really Amish, or just on drugs?
343 posted on
05/10/2005 11:50:04 AM PDT by
js1138
(e unum pluribus)
To: AmishDude
Women, for example, are an example of a system in which the variables is[sic] not just infinite, but uncountable. I'm sure this is true, whatever it says, but the expression of your idea is rather poor. What, for exsample, is the logical difference between infinite and uncountable?
When you can generalize beyond the specific eccentricities of the specific problem on which you are working, you can begin to understand what is happening.
I suppose this is, in some way or another, not technically false, but what does it mean?
354 posted on
05/10/2005 12:06:43 PM PDT by
js1138
(e unum pluribus)
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