Multiple Dimensions of Space 1
Uploader Comments (Nazdorovje)
All Comments (46)
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Why is Andy Samberg teaching math?
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About the time when these math teachers start talking about f=(x), I start looking around at the walls of the classroom...looking at the chipped paint on the walls...looking at the design of the tiles on the ceiling...looking at the chick's breasts next to me...are those single "D" or double "D" measurements? ...looking at the chick's ass who's sitting in front of me and I think, "God-damn...there's a whole world out there having fun right now...and I'm stuck in here listening to this shit." lol
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get a smart board loser
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Math is totally awesome
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I always had a problem with the 2d analogy. How could the 2d man see his house, when it has no height?
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Dumb ass there are six demotions:
Length
Width
Height
Distance between objects
Movement/Speed
Time
I'm thirteen, so I have no Idea who taught u that but Einstein don't lie.
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@TDTech1 Its a "thin line" between { infinitely small } and { invisible }.
pun intended........Lol
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This young man will make a fine teacher one day! I thought he did a great job explaining to a dumbass like me! :-)
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In practical use, very few people other than engineers will use this. Still when handing a fourth dimension such as color, temperature, density, or time, this can be quite practical.
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This is misleading in some sense. The fourth spatial dimension isn't some remote, entirely separate plane of existence of 4 dimensional shapes. When physicists say our space-time is 4D, they are talking about the fourth spatial dimension. Our 3D world is just a frame in a 4D timeline, and as you move throughout "time", you are jumping from one frame to another. The changing of one 3D state to another gives the illusion of motion and time. Time arises out of our experience of the 4th dimension
he did a good job giving a basic explanation. For those who do not understand multiple dimensions, it is fascinating...
Nazdorovje 3 years ago