 Elder God says, math is the language of nature. It's no wonder there are loads of connections. Indeed. Here, with all these healthy munchies, I'm here with a 16-inch pizza, a bottle of Fanta and some Doritos. Hilarious. Well, pizza can be super delicious, right? It can be super healthy as well. Why not? Fanta I haven't had for ever, man. I don't know what Fanta would taste like right now. And Doritos I haven't had. Doritos or Fanta for ever, brother. Long, long time. Is math invented or discovered? Math is the language that we've come up with to try to understand the world around us. So I don't know if it's invented or discovered. I think it's something that we've developed, right? To be able to understand what the hell's going on. Right? Nines bro, now the brownies is in full effect and this pizza is divine. Nice. And the Fanta would taste so good. Would taste so good. Okay, let's take down the vape. Let's DJ. We'll be back. Okay, we'll be back. Turn it off. I got a feeling we might not hit the liqueur. Again, should we do a comic book haul? Definitely recovered. Then cultivated to serve humanity. Math was a gift Elder God says. Discovered. Definitely discovered. Then cultivated to serve humanity. Discovered. You say discovered. Is it coming up with something? Is that a discovery? Coming up with the language? Coming up with a with a with a perspective on a certain something? Is that a discovery? I guess that's a discovery. Where does the word math comes from? Mathematics. But you already knew that one. You want a deeper meaning of it. I have no idea. Mathematics. Greek I assume. Is it Greek? The oldest math we know is not Greece. This is the Middle East, I think. Right? Cheryl. There's my friend. Cheryl, how are you doing? Awesome. It's in nature. It's everywhere. It's everywhere. Mathematics is everywhere. And one thing we have to appreciate is some of the things that we call laws, like Newton's laws, they're not laws, they're approximations. So we've developed a language to help us understand the world around us. And a lot of our understanding of the world around us, based on the mathematics, the language we've come up with to try to understand the world around us, are approximations. They're not laws. There are best approximations of what's going on. Please appreciate that. So Newton's laws are not laws. They're approximations. Maxwell's equations, where if you're studying physics, I think they show you four or five, there's actually 20 of them, right? They have other variables with shortened versions that we see. They're not laws anymore, they're approximations. I don't even know if the other ones are laws, they're approximations. So it's brilliant. It's brilliant all around. It's brilliant all around. God, the word mathematics comes from the Greek word meaning knowledge or learning. Nice. Nice. Mathema, meaning knowledge or learning. Nice. Nice. I did not know that. There's one word. Two words that I learned that involved the word math in the last few years that I didn't know about, or last 15 years or whatever. One is math core, metal, math core. I think that's an amazing genre that has developed in the last 20 years. So Dillinger's scapegoat would be math core. Animals as leaders is math core. Basically math core is very intricate metal music that's layered. Phenomenal, really. Dive in there and blow your mind. The other word is polymath. I didn't really know what polymath was until I looked it up. I was like, oh, polymath, that sounds fantastic. And that's sort of along the lines of meaning knowledge or learning, which is basically someone who's diving into or an expert, and I don't want to say expert, but understands multiple systems from one understand. Anyway, polymath. I like that word. I like to think that it's a combination of two. We create axioms and then follow them to their logical conclusion. We can define what a circle is by the fact that the ratio of a circle circumference to its diameter is equal to 3.14159 dot, dot, dot, and that's pi, which is an approximation. Isn't something we decide to be true. It's isn't. Isn't something we decide to be true. It's objectively true and what discovered. See, here's the thing, Joe. What you said there is true, but you got to go one step before the axiom. All axioms have assumptions. So the mathematics that we know right now has been developed based on the assumptions that we made originally to come up with the axioms. And this is where we've come so far. So that says two things. We've developed a language which is extremely precise and works for almost all situations that we can encounter on, or some people encounter the only ones that they are aware of in their lives. There are situations where mathematics doesn't really jive what's going on. So that's one thing it does. We're very good at developing a language discovering, as Alar God says, something that explains our interaction with matter. The other thing that says our original assumptions were pretty solid. So those are really good assumptions and they've come up with this. Now, guarantee there's a couple of things we haven't accounted for in our assumptions which, if we're able to come up with, we'll probably link up macro and the micro. Give us one equation for everything when it comes to physics. It's interesting. It's cool. It's super cool. But amazing approximation, if you consider, like people say, oh, are we really intelligent? Yeah, we are. Of course, we're intelligent. Look at the language we've come up with to try to explain what's going on. Some of it may be ridiculous, but hell, we're at least on a learning path. That's why we need to share information. That's why censorship is, the censorship is the death of humanity. Really, any place, any state, any person that wants to censor free thought, free communication, is literally wants to commit genocide on what it means to be human. So, censors are the enemy of humanity, just like bureaucrats are the enemy of humanity. They usually work together hand in hand. Okay, so yeah, kudos to human, human entity to be able to do this. Wow, super cool. Lions, I'm too high for math talk right now. I should bring out a board. Let's complete the square. I only got Plato and Euclid, the father of geometry, believed to varying degrees, mathematics to be the architecture of nature, that nature is a physical manifestation of mathematical laws. I would agree with that, but underline emphasize physical matter, matter, right? So the mathematics we know is really anchored to matter, right? But us human beings are not just this matter, there's something else, the spark we want to think about it, whatever we want to think about. So we need to develop a language that, and some people say we already have a language for that, maybe vibrations, music, whatever it is, right? So this become connects up with the micro and the macro, right? If your energy, there is no matter, all that just, right? So the question is, can we in this state come up with some kind of mathematics, if you want to call it, to also explain things that are not connected to matter, right? Like, it's brilliant. And some people, some mathematicians have tried to work on this, right? Oh, the duality thing, the, the, for physics, what do you call it? The observer affects what's being observed, right? So as soon as you observe something, you change it's, or probability of whatever it is increases, right? So it's cool stuff, cool stuff. Oh, God. So it's probably both discovered and invented. Yeah. Yeah. But is there another word for that? I don't know. My name is Trout. That's, that's what's so exciting about learning. It's like you're getting closer and closer to the truth all the time. You just can't have hubris about it and think we already know all there is to know. That's a dead end, man. That's a dead end. 100% and those are cults. This is the truth. There is nothing else beyond this. The effin truth. Anybody else that contradicts the truth is evil. Stop associating with them. Then you know you're in a cult. 100%. And especially when they control your diet. Okay. 100% cult. All right. That's on some bacon. After this, we're going to do a comic book haul game. We've got to do a comic book haul. Nice. Look at this baby broccoli. Look at this. So good from our CSA. The CSA is kicked in and bacon. All right. Healthy snacks are the best snacks. Super delicious game. Badger. The same civilization have the same mass skills like the Romans and Egyptians. The Romans and Egyptians, yes. But what about previous civilizations to that? Right. Mayans. Look at the indigenous population in North America. There's, there is, there is structures out there that the indigenous population in North America has built in United States. One of them I know of where they built the structure, which basically at certain times of the year or every 12 years, you know, the light comes through the window, shines on this altar, all this jazz, right? And based on astronomy and to do astronomy, you need mathematics. That's one of the core places that mathematics developed from, right? And people are like, how did these people do this? You need mathematics to do this and we don't know their mathematics. Like we don't know the mathematics of the pyramids, right? We don't. And there are multiple pyramids all replaced. Dark matter again. We're going to give it a little bit ahead. I want it creamy. Creamy. I want it creamy. Nice head. I wanted this one to be creamy. That's a little bit too much head, but we'll take it. We'll take it in goods. I'll take two plus two for 1,000 Alex. Well, then we're going to do comic book. It's no longer Alex Travec, poor Alex. He was Canadian, but he died of cancer, I think. A couple of years ago, two, three years. By the way, the one who's hosting it now, I found this out for my mom because she watches what do you call it? Oh, I forgot the name. Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy now. We always have to say it together. Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy. But the person who's hosting Jeopardy now, we used to be the champion that was there before and they had three candidates in mind and this is the person they ended up picking. And I watched Jeopardy when I go to my mom's. And he's a pretty good host. And he's a pretty good host. But here's to Alex Travec. I love that. Sometimes it's just, you need the head. Nice. Nice. My name, my name's Trout. Yeah, man. I think we have a spark of the divine. A connection to another plane or something is what gives us will to play with the physical world around us and change things. Indeed, and as long as you understand or you've connected or experienced that part, which is not, might have a connection to the matter but could be severed. If you've had that disassociation with matter, let's call it, then you realize that our current understanding of the world is not enough. It just doesn't cut it. You realize, hey, wait a second, there's a little bit more here. Not only a little bit more, a lot more. So it's worth exploring, hence, Psychonauts. Again, salut to Julian Assange. Freya Assange, Freya Assange, Freya Assange. Julian Assange published in journalists that has been crucified for trying to bring transparency and accountability of capitalist power to humanity, something that we desperately, desperately need in our societies. For more information, see wikidlist.org, defend.wikidlist.org, or countless resources available online. Salut, gang. Very nice. Very nice. Very nice. Lark Park. Cheers, mate. Cheers. Salut, salut, Allah, God. Those research occasions in which the very act of measurement or observation directly alters the phenomenon under investigation. One of the best examples I heard of this is just imagine if you want to measure the pressure on your tire. The only way you can measure it is put the gauge in it, and as soon as you put the gauge in it, you change the pressure of the tire. That was one of the best examples I've seen, or best metaphors I've seen to try to explain it.