 Hi everyone, this is Chichou. Welcome to my channel and welcome to another live stream. Today is February 22nd 2020 and we're doing a four hour drop in math tutoring session in support of Julien Assange and WikiLeaks. Okay, hello, I love Spider-Man. How are you doing? And just for the intro, how are you doing on this fine morning? You're doing fantastic, brother, doing fantastic. Been, been busy, been very busy. I hope your day is going well. You got to be, I'm pretty sure you're going to be in the theaters today. Free Assange, free Assange, 100%. And for those of you that might be watching this on another platform or after this live stream or popping in and I will be mentioning this during this live stream, basically we're doing this because Julien Assange has this extradition hearing starting on Monday and today in London there was a demonstration March in support of Julien Assange. So I thought we'll do a four hour live stream, math tutoring live stream instead of a two hour live stream the way we usually do it in support of Julien Assange and WikiLeaks. And we will be following the story in depth. And we do have Julien Assange and WikiLeaks or WikiLeaks and Julien Assange playlist on YouTube and some of those videos have been loaded on BitShoot as well. Okay, so there's a whole bunch of information there if you want to know what all this is about. Tink, how are you doing? Four hour session. Buckle up, folks. Buckle up. I got a lot of snacks here, some drinks to keep me energized for this thing. Welcome, by the way, to another live stream. Flex Bristow. How's it going, Chuchot? Doing well, doing well. Thank you very much, Flex. Zimmy, how's life? Hope you're doing well. Zimmy, hello, hello, folks. Hello, hello. Hope you guys are doing well. I got up early this morning and I was following the live stream of the protests. I sort of caught it towards the end, so I was watching the after the videos were loaded up from Julien. I keep on forgetting the channel that I've been following. Assange, free Assange or something like this. I've posted a link in Discord, in my Discord page of the channel I've been following, as well as consortium news. They just uploaded a sort of a lecture with Korben and someone else that they were talking about Julien Assange. So it was an open discussion going on and WikiLeaks and all that jazz. And again, it's amazing times to be alive. It's amazing times to be alive. We're witnessing some of the most... Thank you, Spiderman. We're witnessing some of the most incredible times in human history in terms of geopolitics, politics, in terms of how our society is going to function for the next foreseeable future. Incredible, really. Sleepy ways. Four hours to show. Goddamn, bro. Stamina. We'll see how long I last, brother. We'll see how long I last. When it comes to mathematics, I've done long sessions with people, but usually I take every hour, I take a little bit of a break. But we'll do, we'll do as much as we can. Okay. Clink-clunk. I hope to give that Russian agent a life. See, clink-clunk? You have no idea what you're talking about. And we're doing these types of live streams to hopefully try to enlighten you, educate you, bring you into the light. Because if you still think that WikiLeaks and Julian Assange, if you still believe the corporate propaganda that they've been spewing regarding Russiagate, you are a very good product of our centralized education system because you're a good little surf following orders as you've been trained to do. So you're not really a free-thinking human being, but you're just, in the gaming circles, they called you an MPC, right? You're a non-player, really. You're just someone that's been programmed to spew garbage, propagate misinformation. It's unfortunate because it's really amazing, amazing to be a free-thinking human being to interact with this world and understand what you love and not be manipulated as a tool of the elites, really, who have no, you know, no desire to give you your freedom that you deserve as a free-living entity, right? Aside from that, you just might be a bot. Right. Good to see you. Oh, sleepy waves, what's good, Spider-Man? Flex Bristol, a four-hour mass session could be pretty useful for me. I've got a GCSEs in me, which are my final exams for secondary school in the UK. Flex, you got question? Drop them. Okay, no matter what we're talking about, if there's a math question coming up, ask your question, anything you want us to talk about, and we'll pause everything else we're talking about and do a little bit of mathematics or a lot of mathematics. That's what I'm making myself available for, right? Because I believe, personally, if more people were educated in the language of mathematics, we wouldn't get bots like clock here, or tools, serfs, people who haven't figured out what it means to be free-thinking human beings, sort of pushing the agenda of the oligarchs, right? They would actually understand what is going on, because they could connect the dots, right? So, extremely important, and that has been my thesis throughout the whole time I've been online, which is basically since 2005, 2006, right? Which is to educate people in the language of mathematics, because once people are literate in the language of mathematics, then our society will improve, right? We have over 25 exams in a one-month period, 25 exams in a one-month period, that's too much. They have and still are withholding leaks regarding the Russia. Brother, you have to appreciate, I studied engineering, I'm a dude, well, it doesn't, what you studied at the university, like I said, it really doesn't make a difference. To be a free-thinking human being, you have to be able to connect the dots, right? You can't just consume what they're telling you. You have to be able to process that information, right? Just regarding WikiLeaks, you have to appreciate that for the last nine years, for the last eight years, WikiLeaks has put a lot of their resources into defending Julian Assange and trying to make sure that their platform is not shut down. So, that takes a tremendous amount of energy when the strongest, most powerful institutions in the world, the militaries of the world, are trying to shut you down. Your resources are limited, right? You can only do so much, which is what their intention was, was to shut down WikiLeaks. WikiLeaks was extremely active in the first four years of them being online, right? Collateral Murder Video, Vault 7, OPCW, Guantanamo Bay Files, Podesta Emails, right? The Afghan, well, the Afghan people came from somewhere else, but the whole deal, right? You have to appreciate that there's limited resources. How much could you do if the militaries of the military industrial complex of the United States, the UK were after your ass? Man, you wouldn't be able to breathe, right? Doctor, your point was wrong. No. Mathematics. I studied geophysics, by the way, Clint Clark. I studied geophysics. I got my degree in geophysics and a minor in mathematics, right? I did 10 years of geophysics and mathematics work. I can honestly tell you, I had no idea what mathematics was until I started teaching mathematics because I was just a product of a centralized education system. I was a monkey-seeing monkey-do in terms of mathematics. Once I started teaching mathematics, when I had students come up to me and say, hey, why do you do this this way? And I didn't have the answers, right? Because I just was a monkey, right? I was trained to do the things the way I was trained to do them because you would get the answer out. But it's not the answer that matters. It's the process that matters. Once you understand the process, then you can make the connections, right? So I don't give any credit, any credence, any value to people coming on. When I talk to them, if they tell me they're a professor in this or they're a laborer in this, I talk to them to see how they process the world around them, right? Thank you very much for the Twitch Prime sub, Lonely Piggy. I'm just going to catch up on a little bit of the chat, right? Remember the good system of a downed free thinkers are dangerous. Free thinkers are dangerous. What is Brexit? We're going to keep the conversation, brother, sleepy ways. Brexit is decentralization of the European Union, right? That's what it is. It's all about decentralization right now, okay? Brexit is the UK's leaving of the European Union and it causes issues with international trade, immigration, travel, etc., with countries in the EU. Yeah, to a certain degree. But it also decentralizes power. Chico, hope all is well as always. For sure, Lonely Piggy. Thank you very much. Hello, welcome, Spider-Man says. Hey, hey, sub Chico Dante. How's life? How's life? Friend, hope you're well. Randall, how's it going? Hope you're doing well. That was a powerful beginning to our four-hour math life stream, right? Let me show you guys what I got as snacks here, okay? What do we got? We got tea. We got water. I might, if I'm going that fast, I got to pace myself, right? A little bit of tea. A little bit of water. I might have to go for a refill. We got, we got, I got, I made some pancakes like yesterday and some of them were chocolate chip pancakes. So I got, I just went into the fridge and cut up some, some of the chocolate chip pancakes and I put them in this and I got a little fork. It was a little fork. To eat chocolate chip, cold chocolate chip pancakes. It's good carbs and it's made with good stuff. I was going to put some, what do you call that down, blackberry jam that I've made, the homemade blackberry jam on top of it, but I also take it easy on it, right? It's really good. I might have done, I might have put in a little bit too much chocolate chip cookies. I got some oranges, little tangerines, very good. And I've been loving our peanut butter and apple side dish. Again, little protein, little carbs, those are my snacks for today's stream. Aside from that, welcome to another live stream. I'm not sure if you guys have been following the Julian Assange Wiki leak stuff, or if you got math questions. Who was it that they say had a test coming up? Flex. Is it flex? Yeah, flex. Go dig up that, the stuff you need to study math. If you need help, start dropping questions, right? And we'll do our best. Me, for my part, there's a whole bunch of people on chat that show up that love mathematics that might be able to lend your hand in what you need, right? And then we'll take it from there. Weekends are nice. Hope you guys are staying warm. End of winter. Spring is coming. This morning I went out early, and there was birds chirping. Once the birds start chirping, you know spring is on its way. The extradition hearing begins in two days. Yeah, down to Monday. And I believe the first round is going to be just a few days and then they've extended it later on for like a few weeks. And I'm assuming once this is said and done, it's basically a kangaroo court right now, right? Once this is done, there's going to be appeals and stuff like this, I hope anyway. So the trick is to delay this as long as possible, right? The optimum goal is to get Julian Assange freed, right? Ideally, what we want to see if the judge has not been bought and paid for, which the odds are she has, I believe is female judge, unless she got removed. It was the older one that was female. The previous one that was female, it was connected through the military industrial combat. It was just crazy, right? Ideally, first day, first two minutes, first five minutes, they hear the cases and the judge goes dismissed, get out, right? The UK is not puppet of the United States military, right? Maybe they do? I doubt it. What's an extradition hearing? Extradition hearing is basically the United States telling the UK government to grab some person from their country, specifically Julian Assange, right now, and ship them out to the United States because according to the United States government, Julian Assange has committed crimes based on US law, but Julian Assange hasn't been to the United States. He was in the UK. So if this case goes through, it means that any government anywhere in the world can request the extradition of anyone in the world living anywhere in the world to be extradited to their country for breaking laws according to their country. Now just imagine what that implies, right? Have you ever been to China Sleepy Waves? I'm pretty sure you've broken some laws, Chinese laws. Have you ever talked shit about any country? Well, they have the right to extradite you. Julian Assange gets extradited. You, me, anyone else can get extradited anywhere in the world, okay? Just keep that in mind. Just keep that in mind. It's deciding whether Julian Assange will be sent to the US to face charges. Face charges based on US laws, which they're just rolling out, right? According to the United US laws, Julian Assange is a journalist, right? So he has, well we all do have the freedom of speech, but they're basically going to charge him for being a journalist. And keep this in mind, they're making Julian Assange. They're using him to make an example of him, right? So just imagine if you're a journalist, you've got your hands on some juicy material that is pretty important for citizens of the world to know, right? And right now you're sitting on it and you have to really think about, are you going to publish this information? Are you? Will you publish information that exposes capital, power of their crimes, right? May they be war crimes, may they be financial crimes, of their crimes? Will you do it after you've seen what they're doing to Julian Assange? Some would argue the most important journalist in the world, right? Will you do it? Do you have the co-owners to do it, huh? Will you do it? I don't know. I don't know. Look at the Panama Papers that came out, right? About the financial misdealings and tax evasion and all that jazz that came out that would involve like hundreds of journalists around the world publishing this information, right? One of the journalists in Malta was assassinated, right? Will you do it? I'm not really familiar with the Assange situation. All I know is that he leaked U.S. documents. What was actually in the documents that he leaked? There was a whole bunch. There was something called a collateral murder video where we actually had footage. Anyone that's been following war, you know that atrocities are committed in war, right? But this video footage that was leaked by now, admitted by Bradley Manning, Chelsea Manning, right? Bradley Manning at the time, Chelsea Manning now, right? Where U.S. helicopter gunship executed dozens of people, a couple of kids in there as well, right? That were coming to help the people that were shot down by a military gunship, right? There were journalists in there and the U.S. propaganda machine said that they were combatants that were armed, right? So they had to take them out. But then later on, this video comes out says, nope, these were like innocent bystanders, journalists, children that they gunned down, right? Wow, holy Kamolis. And then after that, Vault 7, Guantanamo Bay files, OPCW, Podesta emails, just so much information flexed. It is the most important source of information for any journalist in the world. And journalists in the world that are not using WikiLeaks to do research, they're, I really wouldn't call them journalists. If I was writing an article on any country, on any person, you would go to the WikiLeaks website and do a search to see what has been released regarding this country, this corporation, this individual, right? This entity. And you would have to check to see if that information is relevant to the report that you're releasing, right? It's huge. It's huge. Has the U.S. never tried to extradite someone before? For journalism, as far as I know, no. They try it all the time, yeah. But most countries don't care unless they have an extradition treaty with the U.S., yeah. And as far as I know, Julian Assange is the first journalist they are trying to extradite. I'm a writer and a journalist. I worked on the Panama Papers. Really, seriously, I swear I did. That's a, say that three times fast. It was such a shit show. All those people and this company with thousands of people, lawyers working just to cover the asses of everybody on both sides of every major conflict since the 1980s. Was it since the 1980s? And what was a journalist name that was assassinated with the car bomb in Malta? I forget her name. I shouldn't. I should be, her name should be etched in everybody's mind because she sacrificed herself to bring truth. Right. To us. And you can't spell very likely. No, no, seriously. I'm on my windy white, whitey mags. I'm not used to it and didn't plan to type. I was just checking streams while snacking. So what was the name of the journalist? That's your test to see if you, because I'm assuming anybody that's worked on the Panama Papers has knows who she was and which one. The journalist that was taken out by a car bomb and her and her son were actually working on one of the stories that exposed some of the oligarchs. I believe in Malta that were robbing the country blind, really. Right. And she was taken out. Let's find her name. Let's find her name. Let's find her name. This is what I'm searching right now. Malta journalist Panama Papers. I should put it. There we go. Daphren Karuna Galiza. Okay. Here's her. Yeah. You know what? I don't want to link to Wikipedia. Here. I'll copy and paste her name. Okay. Whiteboard equals math. Whiteboard equals math. I'm going to write her name. Thank you very much. Multi multiplayer. Whiteboard equals math. Yep. Whiteboard equals math. I'm going to write her name down on the whiteboard. So anybody watching this video after the live stream, once it's loaded on YouTube bit shoot or any other platform can look her up. Her hero. Important. Very, very important. Very, very important. Right. Very, very important. Very, very important. I can't recall. You can't recall. If you can't, you can't recall and you worked on the Panama Papers. I doubt. I doubt. There was one Bulgarian they shot in Amsterdam. Was there? I was working in a drench pub. I didn't see when it happened and they sent me there there because I know some Russian and also half of the people in our branch. There are Brits and we're the only ones who speak English. At least some more. Oh, we can wake the stream at 8 p.m. here. Russ Reidmaren. Nice. Yeah. Well, you know what? So it was chill live streams we do. They're good for the morning, I'm assuming. Just quiet down, right? The rest of the EU cold fuse talk Euro English. They understand each other, but we don't understand them and vice versa. What's this face? What face? Yeah. I have no idea what that is, but it is what it is. No, this person. Look into her history. Look into what she helped release, right? Important, important. And she was assassinated for telling the truth for journalism, right? What a face is like shock, is it? Okay. Again, excuse my spelling. Typing with one hand and trying to watch another chest stream at the moment. Okay. What a face is like colleagues. I have a very rare Saturday night. Oh, you're not working Saturday night. What in a pub? What's going on? How could you not be working on Saturday night? I hope you're going to chill, Martin. What are you going to do? Cheecho, you beautiful bastard. Knock, brock, 12. How are you doing? I hope you're doing well. Oh, you did a stream a few days ago on relationships. Really annoyed. I know I missed that one as I'm at a point where I could use some advice in that area. But a lot of the things you talked about in it have given me a new outlook on my future. Awesome. I'm glad you found a useful flex. And we did that stream because someone requested it. Someone put a request on Discord if we could do another relationship stream. So just put in the word out there. If you guys want us to do a live stream regarding a certain topic, post it on Discord, post it on our Patreon page. I'm actually going to roll out the join thing on YouTube. We hit 30,000 subscribers on YouTube and we got approved for whatever they have where you can join, where you can support this work by like, I think it's like, I don't know what it is, 499 or something like this. So I'm assuming there'll be some kind of, there's supposed to be a little badge that goes beside your name when you post comments and whatnot. There might be a forum there as well. So if there is anything that you guys would like us to cover, post it on Discord, post it on Patreon. I have a subscribe star page, post it on a subscribe star, post it in the join in YouTube thing, post it on Bitshoot. Just get that information to me somehow and if I can, I'll manage to put it in. Okay. It was about to watch Criminal Minds. Then your stream came up, oh okay, Criminal Minds. I don't know Criminal Minds. It must be a UK series, yeah? I'll check your YouTube Live. Finally, an interesting streamer I haven't seen before. Thanks. Try to keep it fun, right? And informative. It's all about education. It's ending soon. Oh, it's ending soon. So it must be a long-running series, Criminal Minds. Be right back. How long has been imprisoned for now? Sleepy waves. He's, he got pulled out of the Ecuadorian embassy last year. So they extracted him out of the Ecuadorian embassy. So the Ecuadorian government, when the government flipped over to this puppet person that they have in Ecuador right now, right? He gave up Julian Assange for basically everyone pretty much agrees now for a guarantee of a $4 billion loan that Ecuador was going to get, which is basically going to be siphoned off, right? So they're throwing on that $4 billion from the IMF on the Ecuadorian people. I think it's from the IMF anyway. On the, on citizens on Ecuador, because these oligarchs couldn't turn down $4 billion, right? Because the United States really decides who gets these loans, right? And the Ecuadorian embassy opened up his doors in London and they gave up their own citizen, right? They, like, you got to give it to them. That's the highest price paid for any individual, any time in history, I believe, right? $4 billion for one person. That's how important Julian Assange is to the US government, right? So they gave up Julian Assange for billions of dollars, right? They pulled him out. The UK government, the puppet government, the judiciary system, which really there is there's no justice in it, right? They threw him in jail for 50 weeks for skipping bail because he's seek asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy when he realized that they were going to arrest him for bogus charges and ship him up to Sweden, from Sweden who's going to be shipped out to the United States, right? So they threw him in jail for 50 weeks for skipping bail, right? Holy Kamolis. Okay, ridiculous, ridiculous, right? And then they put him in solidary confinement. His 50 weeks was done and now for the last few months, we've kicked it into the extradition hearing, right? But before that, he was basically under lockdown in the Ecuadorian embassy for the last eight years or so, right? He went into, he seeked asylum at the Ecuadorian embassy like eight years ago, okay? So he's been basically in semi-isolation lockdown mode imprisoned for the last eight, nine years, right? This is probably, most people will agree, the most important journalists in the world. Cicero, there needs to be a live stream about the prison industrial complex and political prisoners, indeed sleepy waves. Yeah, there does need to be. Okay, I'll keep it in mind. I looked at a lot of that data, by the way, regarding prisons many moons ago, over 15 years ago or something like that, just to see what the data, what the mathematics was telling me about the prison industrial complex, specifically in Canada, United States, right? And man, once you look at the data, once you process the data, mathematics does not lie, right? Numbers don't lie. The way you collect the data might be biased. The way you process the data might be flawed. The way you decide to present the data might be flawed. Let's call it that, right? However, if you go in there with an open mind and an unbiased look at the numbers, right? So if you haven't made up your mind, you're seeking information, you look at the data, the data tells you everything. Alright, so thanks for the request sleepy waves. What I'll do is, I'll keep it in mind, I'll bounce it around in my head. Remind me again on Discord or another stream, because I need a few reminders to kick things up, right? Thank you very much for the Twitch Prime sub by Spiderman. The numbers, insane, right? I looked at specifically race related numbers. Some of them I wrote a couple of articles regarding the prison industrial complex a long time ago, 15 years ago or something like that. One of the numbers for the same crime, in the same state, a black person was 10 to 15 times more likely to go to prison than a white person. Like identical crimes, right? Like how can you interpret that, right? And this wasn't just one situation. And this wasn't just one state. This was the extreme state, right? A black person versus a white person, right? And you put Hispanics in the middle, right? Depending on your race, you were either more likely or less likely to be sent to prison based on the same crime. Now this was data from 15 years ago or so, right, that I looked at. Now, situation has changed now. There's a lot of white people that are being sent to hardcore prison sentences because it's not a matter of race anymore. And it never really has been to a certain degree, right? The race card has been played by the oligarchs. It's basically about finances, money, capital, right? How much money do you have and who can you pay off, right? Like for example, one of the DuPont family was charged, taken to court, convicted of pedophilia, right? The judge refused to throw him in jail because he said he wouldn't fare well well in jail, right? So just imagine if you go to court, you're convicted of a horrendous crime and the judge turns to you and says, oh, you know what? You're not going to do too well in jail. We're not going to send you to jail, right? What? Why is that? Is it because he's a multi-billionaire or is it because he just had a good smile on his face? What do you think about Jamal Khashoggi and what happened to him? He was chopped up on behest of the Saudi regime that didn't like what he was doing. Was Jamal Khashoggi a nice person? No. He was 100% okay with killing Yemenis citizens, right? He was one of the oligarchs. He's just stepped on a few toes and they chopped them up and threw them in whatever it was, right? What the number said? I just realized I had my Twitch Prime subscription and the best place to use it. Thanks. We have a racist system. We have a very racist system, period, right? Where did they send him to instead then home? Where did they send him to instead? I don't understand that Kelunnos. I don't understand that question. Are you familiar with Michael Fawcett's panel Plism? Ah, Fawcett, this is the French philosopher, right? I'm just going to look up his face because I'm not great with names. I'm okay with faces. Yeah, a little bit, not much. People have brought him up before. So I looked at the little debate he had with Chomsky, the black and the white one, where they were talking, I believe it was Chomsky. And I read a couple of stuff that he put out. Not extensive. I haven't read any books by him or any extended chapters by him. I need to sub-write. Not necessarily more. Hey, we got a little frog there. Dante's laughing. Need a in there. Need a in there. Let's check it out. Why did they send him to I have no idea. I don't even know what to interpret that. How to read that true. If you post it again, I'll read it. If it makes sense to me, I have to read certain things a few times over for them to click. It's like doing math problems. Then, home. Where did they send him to instead then home? Are we talking about Assange? Are we talking about Assange? Spider-Man. Here, let me show you this. I mentioned that I had one student that he wanted to, he'd never read any Valiant comics and was really excited about the Bloodshot movie coming out next month in like three weeks or so. I went to the dollar bins in our comic bookstore and I picked up Armor Hunters number one Bloodshot. So, Armor Hunters Bloodshot number one and he gave it to him yesterday and I picked up four, three other Valiant number one comics Secret Weapons for a dollar that I'm going to give it to him during the next couple of weeks. Every time I see him, I bring him a comic. So, this is a great series. It was fun. Beautiful artwork. Nice chill storytelling. Eternal Warrior Awakening number one and this series is absolutely phenomenal. This is a dollar debut so they did a reprint of it. 99 cents. So, this is just a dollar reprint which I bought for a dollar. It's the Harbinger number one from 2012 series just in case. Well, I know there's people here that love the comic books so I'm going to give that to the students over the next couple of weeks. Every time I see him, I'm going to give him one. Right? I use the emote. Nice. I can't believe he's been in prison for 50 weeks already. Yeah, longer now. Longer now. That rich guy. No prison for him. Maybe house. Oh, yeah, that guy, yeah. They put him under house arrest. Prohibition, basically. Incredible. Right? You can do the search. I just followed and he's not an anomaly when it comes to the oligarchs. Right? There's been multiple other cases just like him. Right? The dude who the judge said wasn't fit to go. Yeah, that guy. I mean, you can do, you can do Kelunas. So here, let me find it for you. Just go DuPont. Let me find you the story. DuPont. Let me see if this comes up. DuPont's prison. DuPont here, judges prison for raping three-year-old daughter. Yeah. I mean, he was even reported on CNN. Yeah, this is a guy. Here, I'll send you, I'll give you guys the link just because. I mean, that's just the top one that showed off from DuckDuckGo. So you can do the arrest yourself. There's a bloodshot bundle on a humbubile. Yeah, I've seen that. This bloodshot is fantastic. Yeah. Yeah, more three-year-old. Hello, Spiderman's wife. How are you doing? I love Spiderman. He's a very nice person. Very nice guy. And I'm assuming he was very lucky to hook up with you because only an amazing person Spiderman would be hooking up with. Leroy from Block is crazy. Bloodshot is Quentin Seylo. Quentin Seylo. What's this all about? As far as bloodshot goes, fantastic. It's an amazing character. I am Spiderman's wife. See Witch 13. How are you doing, See Witch 13? Are you into comics as well? Which character? Who do you love? Who do you love? You're so nice. Aw, yes. Awesome. We got a lot of love going on here. That's great. That's great. I hope you're into comics as well. I hope you're into comics as well. We still haven't done any mathematics, but we're chatting up. It is an open discussion, so we can do anything we want, really. I'm not sure. I'm going to upload this tomorrow to BitShoot on YouTube. I'm not sure if I'm going to have time to do timestamps for this video, so we're just going to upload it as is. Because I want to make sure we have this up before Monday's extradition hearing begins, and then tomorrow we're doing just a two-hour live stream regarding WikiLeaks and Julian Assange. That's the eighth live stream we're doing for Julian Assange. For your information, I have never read a Marvel comic. You've never read a Marvel comic. Wow. There are some amazing Marvel comics out there, Martin. I'm not. Actually, Marvel is putting on some amazing work as well. There's like all in all, the quantity of amazing comic books coming out right now is mind-blowing. Like, you could be buying comic books on a weekly basis and be reading two, three comic books a day and not have enough time to read them all. And I don't. I don't have enough time to read them all. Some stuff I'm just collecting, some stuff I am reading, some stuff I'm catching up on, some stuff I just want to have as a series. See which I am. Oh, you know I'm a huge spider man. You have to be. I have a spider man tattoo on my arm. No way. Awesome. Crazy. Okay, you guys, yeah, you guys are match made in heaven, right? Math time, math time. If the questions come up, we do. Right? Otherwise, we talk. Oh boy, you need to read something. Oh yeah, spider man, give the recommendations. What's one of my favorite Marvel stories? Does your YouTube have solving for x with quadratic equations? Yeah, there is merely human. And we can do one, by the way, right now if you'd like. But for sure, I have quadratic. I did, I spent two summers for, if you go to my, what do you call it, YouTube channel, it's series 3A and 3B, where I spend a lot of time explaining what it takes to solve for x and really focused on quadratic functions. And it took me two summers to get all that done, because that's when I was doing the stuff, graffiti style, going on, taking my tripod, big chalk. And one summer we did it in a skate park. And another summer I was doing it all around the city. And with ASMR math, we have some stuff regarding quadratics as well. So for sure. But if you have a question, if you want to 3A, 3B, thank you. I will look into it. Here, let me give you the table of contents as well, from my site, chichou.com. If you go to chichou.com, you'll take your block spot. And then if you go to table of contents, okay, or if you go to mathematics, so the hyperlink above says home about here. Here's chichou.com. Let me give you this. Okay. And then if you go to math, the fourth one down, it goes home about TOC means table of contents. And if you go math, there's three different math tables of contents I have. One of them is the language of mathematics, which is what I started off doing, which is a syntax of the language of mathematics. That's series 3A and 3B are in that. There's another one called math and real life, we're replying math in the real world. And then ASMR math has solving quadratic equations as well, right? But it's all randomized. But here's the language of mathematics. Here, I'll give you the main table of contents for the math stuff. Here's the math stuff. It's got all three links to all three in there. And if you do language of mathematics, if you go to 3A and 3B, there's a whole bunch of videos there. It really depends where you want to start. Are you in the early beginning stages of solving for x, solving for equations? Or do you know what the quadratic formula is? Do you know how to factor? Do you know what it means to solve a quadratic function? Oh, man, I'm getting all excited. Let me give you a lowdown on quadratics. Let me give you a lowdown on quadratics. If you're a four right now, by the way, DC, all the way Morton says, what do you mean he was in the Ecuadorian embassy for eight years? He didn't leave that building? No. If he left, I would have grabbed them, zapped them to the United States. I have found an image of Robert Patterson in the suit and on batmore. Yeah, you know what? I saw that image as well. From what I understand, that might be a stunt double. People were talking about it. I collected venture time, nice, and some Disney comics. I also love tons of Marvel. Nice, nice. Adventure time. Those early issues are pretty expensive. At Disney comics, I love the early, the Dell four color stuff. Sea Witch, I love those early. And I have a whole bunch on my wall right now. Actually, I wish I could show it to you. I have Walt Disney Comics, Donald Duck, and there's some mass stuff there and whatnot. And we did a reading of Donald Duck in Mathematicaland, right? Spider-Man sounds like a way too lucky dude. You found a partner with a Spider-Man tattoo on her arm. Nice. Dante, if he had left the embassy, he would have been arrested immediately. But he ended up being sold out anyway. Yeah. Just said he looks a lot like Serge. Did she? Did she? I missed it. Awesome. Oh yeah, she said it to you. Okay. I told her you get that way too often. Yeah. And if she likes System of a Down, direct her to the System of a Down review we have up, right? What's up, man? 1-8-7. I have no idea how you pronounce that name. Yes. Okay. Sure. Let's do it. I am familiar, but I want to master this because I feel it's the foundation of all arithmetic applications for higher learning. It feels uneasy still. Okay. Let's do it, brother or sister, of course. Merely human. Let's do it. Merely human. Look up this name. Important human being. So quadratic functions. By the way, merely human. Should I give you a lowdown from the get-go? Why is it that we won't solve for quadratic functions? Right? Do you know? Let me take this off. Getting a little dizzy. Once I started looking at the board and the screen, it gets dizzying, switching between the two. So what I'm going to do, I'm going to give you a little lowdown on this. Okay. So the reason you want to solve for quadratics, you are free to walk me through the process you would normally take. Okay. Cool. That's man speak. That's man speak. So check this out. What it means to solve for a function, to solve for an equation, is basically you're trying to find the x-intercepts. The foundations of all mathematical applications for higher learning is mathematical logic and set theory. Perps, how's it going? Awesome. Set theory for sure. Right? Mathematical logic. I'm not sure what mathematical logic encompass. I did a little bit of set theory. It was fantastic. People don't know diplomatic protocol. So basically when you're solving for quadratic functions, I'll do, we'll do the parabola. And a quadratic is basically this. Right? It's a function that opens up like this. That would be one function or this would be another function. Right? And these guys you can create by multiplying two linear functions together. So basically if I take two lines and multiply these two lines together, what I end up getting is a parabola that's going to look like this. Okay. Where the two lines cross the x-axis, these lines, where these two lines cross the x-axis, the quadratic function crosses the x-axis. Okay. Important to know, the reason being is this. Quadratic equations are used in everyday life for things like profit analysis of things as well as area calculation. Yeah, for sure. And other things, right? So take a look at this. Like projectiles are quadratic functions. Right? If I take this pen and go whoop, and I go, that's following a parabola. Right? This guy, when if I throw it, it's basically going like this. Here's Chicho throwing a pen and the pen is going to go like this. That is a parabola. If you extend this, right, graph it, you get a parabola. Right? It's important to understand how this motion goes. If you play any video games, quadratic functions are in video games. Right? It's the mathematics, the code when you fire something or if there's movement in the game, it follows a quadratic function. A lot of it. Right? Because there's physics involved in there. Right? Do you talk about philosophy on this channel? Liam, we have for sure one of the first strings we did was pancakes and philosophy or something. Right? Don't want to interrupt the lesson. No, it's okay. It's good. What did McLean mean when he said all concepts are can extensions? I have no idea. Yes. And everything in between. So take a look at this. So let's assume we have a quadratic function and this is your base quadratic function is this by the way. f of x is equal to ax squared plus bx plus c. Right? Where a, b and c are elements of the real numbers in general. If, you know, you're studying high school mathematics, you don't go into the, in my part of world, you don't go into imaginary numbers really. Right? And actually, yeah, well, the two, the x can be here or not. Right? But you need the x squared. You need an x squared for you to create a quadratic. Right? Is this an integer slope? Is this an integer slope? Is this an integer slope? If you take the, what do you call it? The derivative of it f prime would be two ax plus b. Right? So the derivative of this function is lines. Right? And the derivative is basically tangent line to a specific point. So if you have this, right, let's assume the graph of this is this, then this guy, the derivative of it at any given point will give you the linear function, which is basically the slope, the instantaneous change of that thing. Right? That's where the calculus comes in. Okay. So quadratic functions keeps killing me on call of duty, basically. Right? And, and the wins, the win factor. Right? So if you're solving for these quadratacs, let's do, let's do one basic one. Right? Let's go f of x is equal to two x squared plus five x plus three. Okay? So the question would be analyze this thing, graph this thing, or they could give it to you like this. Or they could give it to you like this. Two x squared plus five x plus three is equal to zero. So they could say solve this. Solve this equation. Now, this guy is really this function. And what's the difference between this function and this guy? Well, the function here is f of x. That's your y. And when they accept this thing equal to zero, they're saying, Hey, find the values of x, which make y zero. So when does y equals zero? Okay? I must learn this knowledge. So when does y is equal to zero. So this is f of x. This is x. And f of x is just y again. It's y is equal to f of x. This doesn't mean f times x. It's f of x. Right? It's just a better way of representing y. So when they ask you to solve for this equation, initially, when you learn this thing, they're not really explaining to you that this is a parabola, right? In my part of the world anyway. Could I get some help with some math after this? For sure, Liam. For sure. The autofocus triggering every 10 seconds is killing me. Oh, I'm sorry, brother. At some point, I'll upgrade the stuff. And I'm not sure how to do this without. I haven't figured out how to set this thing without the autofocus on. It's a HD 1080p Logitech. If you guys know, let me know. Post it on Discord for the next stream. I'll try to make sure it doesn't autofocus. But the autofocus comes in handy when I do some close-up stuff, right? Oh, my pleasure, Liam. Okay. So when you're solving for this, you're asking yourself, or they're asking you, when does f of x equal zero? Well, f of x equals to zero on the x-axis. So they're really asking you, when does this parabola cross the x-axis? Okay. Keep that in mind. Because what you end up doing here is, you're going to solve for this function, for this equation, right? And right now, I laid this thing down that you could do it with just factoring it. Yes, they do not seem to teach this in graphing format, which seems counterproductive to me, especially since I'm a visual or merely human. I have my own theory as to why they don't do it, right? But you're not alone. They're not teaching this graphically to anyone, which is insane to me, right? It makes it magic instead of logic, right? And mathematics is all about logic. It's not magic, right? So it removes people from the understanding of what mathematics is, right? So there's two ways we can do this, right? Method one is factor. Method one, factor. Just manually factor it. And I've laid these things down in a way that you can manually factor it. It's easy. Well, relatively easy. This is called a complex trinomial and everything has different English names for it, or any other language names for it. In my part of the world, you call this a complex trinomial. There's a way to factor this, right? And the way they teach this in school, in my part of the world, they teach decomposition. I teach something else. I teach the four-step method, right? So I teach this like this. 2x squared plus 5x plus 3 is equal to zero, right? Let's do this in different colors. And I'm going to lay this out here. Let me lay it out a little bit higher because we might need the extra room, right? So method one, method one. We're going to go 2x squared plus 5x plus 3 is equal to zero. Take the two. Let's do this with green. Yeah, I understood math more when we use graphs in economics. Once you understand how to read data, you realize how powerful math. 100%. 100%, right? So take this guy, multiplied by this guy, right? Physically take it there. So this becomes x squared plus 5x plus 6 is equal to zero, okay? And then what you do is you factor this like a simple triangle. Two numbers that multiply to give you 6 add to give you 5. What are they? 2 and 3, right? Merely human. You're there, right? So check this out. You go x plus 2 times x plus 3, right? Now what you do is you take this number here that you took and moved over there and you drop it in the front of the axis, okay? So you have a 2 here, and a 2 here. Can you see those 2s? I'm going to write them in darker in black, right? So you put the 2 here and the 2 here, okay? Now what you do is you take out a GCF, okay? From this and from this. The GCF out of this is 2, so and you take it out and you dump it, gone, right? So this becomes x plus 1 times 2x plus 3. You got 2x minus 1 x plus 3. If you multiply this out, let's check it out. Let's see if we get this. You're not going to get this, okay? So if we multiply this 2x minus 1 times x plus 3, if you multiply this out, you're going to go you're going to get 2x squared plus 6x minus x minus 3. So you're going to get 2x squared plus 5x minus 3. What's the difference between this and this? This is negative 3. That's positive 3. So the signs matter. You have to be really careful, okay? This is just an algorithm. Let the algorithm do the work for you, okay? When you factor this, it's just four steps. Write the equation step number one. Take this guy, multiply it by this and write it down. When you write it down, factor this as if it was a simple trinomial, okay? So x plus 2x plus 3 and then take the 2, drop it in the front, and then GCF and dump. In here, between here to here, you're going to GCF and dump. Get rid of it, okay? Now, if you don't know how to factor this manually, if you don't know how to factor this manually, you just use the quadratic formula, right? If you have all plus in the function, you don't get a minus in the factorial. No, you don't. But the problem was the way merely human wrote it out, then you would have had 6x plus x, which would have been 7x. So it wouldn't have worked. The middle number would have been off, right? That's the kicker. You adjust it in one place, it throws it off in the other place, right? So for me, I just go into automatic mode whenever a factor in complex trinomials. I just go, right? Now, if I don't know how to factor this, then most of life doesn't work out to be integers, right? The other way you could do this is use the quadratic formula. x is equal to negative b plus or minus the square root of b squared minus 4ac all over 2a, right? And the a, b, and c here are these guys, a, b, and c. So some numbers in front here, right? So what you can do is go a here is equal to 2, b is equal to 5, and c is equal to 3, and just plug these numbers in here. So x is equal to negative 5 plus or minus the square root of 5 squared minus 4 times ac, 2 times 3, all of it divided by 2a, 2 times 2. So negative 5 plus or minus the square root of 25, 4 times 2 is 8, 8 times 3 is 24, minus 24 over 4, which is equal to negative 5 plus or minus square root of 1 over 4. Square root of 1 is just 1, right? But it's plus or minus 1. That's where the 1 plus and minus comes from. So what you're going to have here is x is equal to negative 5 plus 1 over 4, and x is equal to negative 5 minus 1 over 4. So this is, can we see this far down? Yeah. This is x is equal to negative 5 plus 1 is negative 4 divided by 4 is negative 1, and negative 5 minus 1 is negative 6 divided by 4 is x is equal to negative 6 over 4, which is negative 3 over 2. So those are the two things we have here. Now I still haven't solved this one yet. We're going to go back to this one. Oh multiplayer, thank you very much, is gifting three tier subs to Chicho's community. They've gifted a total of three in the channel. Thank you very much for the gifting the subs, brother or sister multiplayer. Thank you. U1f says, right? So this is what we end up getting. Let me create a little room here. I'm going to eliminate this dump, GCF and dump part, right? Now check this out. Over here, we have this thing equal to 0, equal to 0, equal to 0, right? Over here, let me write this a little cleaner. So x is equal to negative 1 and x is equal to negative 3 over 2, right? So x equals negative 1 and x is equal to negative 3 over 2, right? Those are the two values we got. We'll talk about what these are, right? Thanks for the love in here. Yeah, for sure. Thank you for the love, multiplayer, right? So we'll talk about what these are, right? Graphically, I'll show you. But let's make sure the two methods, method two, we understand how the two methods work or we can confirm the answer, right? Now, we've talked about this. Let me erase this guy. What are we going to erase? I'm going to erase the top now. Okay, let's get rid of this. We need a little bit of more room, right? Now, in here, right now we got x plus 1 times 2x plus 3 is equal to 0. Now, I've put out videos regarding this, the power of 0. 0 gives us problems in mathematics. The problem that we have in 0 is we can't divide by 0, right? If we divide by 0, the world, the universe explodes. However, for every negative there's a positive, right? Mathematics, in mathematics, 0 also gives us a tremendous amount of power and the mathematics we know would not be as powerful as it is if this power did not exist on copying all this down on my board, Chichou. Sorry for not being active into it. I'm zoned to math. No worries, Spider-Man. If you're zoned to math, that's what I'm pushing right now, right? Your name doesn't show the quality of generosity, multiply. Your name doesn't show, doesn't it? Oh, hater. Oh my God. No, no, it should be a lover. That's right. So check this out. The power of 0 is this. A times B times C times D times as many numbers as you want equals 0. Ask yourself how this is possible. Now, those of you who've seen this work before, you'll know how this is possible. How could you multiply four or more or two things together, right? Two or infinite things together to give you 0? At least one of them has to be 0, right? I've been watching Chichou's YouTube for years now, awesome. Right? How could you multiply, let's say, four things together to give you 0? One of them must be 0. At least one. You could have multiple things equaling 0, right? So it's not merely human. It's not just one must be 0. At least one must be 0, right? Because you could have 0 times 2 times 5 times 3 is equal to 0, or you could have 0 times 0 times 5 times 3 is equal to 0, or you could have 0 times 0 times 0 times 3 is equal to 0, or 0 times 0, or a whole combination of them, right? So it's pretty important to have at least one of them has to be 0, right? So whenever you have an equation that has things multiplied together to give you 0, you can split it up. That's the power of 0. You can split it up. You can simplify it. You could go a is equal to 0, b is equal to 0, c is equal to 0, d is equal to 0. Now keep in mind, this doesn't work for any other number. At least one must be 0. That is more correct, yeah. Now keep in mind, this doesn't work with any other number. I could put the number 2 here, right? Or a gazillion or negative gazillion, right? And you can't say, oh, you got a times b times c times d equal to 2, then at least one of them has to be 2. So either a is 2, b is 2, c is 2, or d is, you can't do that. That doesn't work, right? The only number this works for is 0. That is the power of 0, and it is unbelievable. If this didn't exist, right? You can pretty much kiss mathematics goodbye, okay? It wouldn't be as useful, right? How are you doing, right? So over here, check this out. We had x plus 1 times 2x plus 3 is equal to 0. Two things multiply to be 0. So at least one of them has to be 0. So you set each one equal to 0. You split it, right? x plus 1 is equal to 0. 2x plus 3 is equal to 0. So x is equal to negative 1, and x is equal to, you bring the 3 over, becomes negative, divide by 2, you get negative 3 over 2. Negative 3 over 2. We got confirmation. We got the same answers using two different methods, right? So what does this mean? This is what it means. You just found the x-intercepts for this parabola. So if we graph this guy, or put it on a, oh, by the way, let me show you this, because this is what they do initially, right? Check this out. And I'll kick it up one level higher as well in this, right? So usually they show you this on a number line. They say, oh, if you put this on a number line, right, then x can be negative 1 or negative 3 over 2. So negative 3 over 2 is negative 1 and a half, right? So let's put our 0 here, and then we're going to go negative 1. Here's negative 2. So x can be negative 1 here or negative 3 over 2 here, right? This is negative 3 over 2. And they say, oh, you solve for x. Congratulations, right? Okay. Hey, I'm serious when I ask, but I know of topic, but Chicho, can you work? Einstein's is your repertoire? I do. Brother, agar, agar, I put out a video. And let me find this. I'm going to do a little tangent because this, looking to do a search for Chicho, why we can't travel at the speed of light? Okay. Chicho, why we can't travel at the speed of light? I talk about Einstein's paper on the electrodynamics of moving bodies. Okay. I need a beer now. I calculate the chances of me going to x over z equals 3.14 pi. I'm putting my shoes on. No, you can't go to your pub on your day off. If method one is similar, what is the point of method two in existing? It is just a check method, no mirror to human because all these numbers don't work out beautifully. What if I change one of these numbers where you can't do it manually? What if I change this number to 15 or 2.35? How are you going to do this manually? Difficult, difficult. So this method is a good exercise to teach people how to do it and stuff like this. It works out nicely. But in the real world, this is the key. Because your equations don't work out so easily. My pleasure, Ag. So the quadratic formula is extremely handy. So when you found these points, you find out, oh, you put them on a number line to go negative 1 and negative 3 over 2. That's the solution. What they don't really tell you is this. Initially, anyway, if you put this on an x y axis, then what these two points are, are the x intercepts for your parabola. Now, if you've been graphing quadratic functions, if the number in front of the x squared is positive, you know the parabola opens up. So you know the parabola is going to look like this. And it's going to come down and go up. We haven't figured out where the bottom is yet. But that's what they ask you, right? Then real quick, same as this one. Let's prove the point conjecture. I don't know the point conjecture, and I'm not very good at proofs. Now take a look at this. Mirror the human and anybody else is watching that you're interested in this. There's another type of questions that they give you, right? And people have a hard time grasping what this means. And it involves any inequalities, right? So I'm just going to take these guys down, or this guy down, right? Let's take this guy down. Because we have this guy right here, right? Let's make this. Now what if instead of saying they give you this question saying 2x squared plus 5x plus 3 is equal to 0, what if they made it an inequality? They said solve for this. 2x squared plus 5x plus 3 is greater than 0, right? What does that mean? What does this mean when they say, hey, what's the solution to 2x squared plus 5x plus 3 being greater than 0? Greater than 0 meaning it's positive, right? Now if you think about this, this guy here, let me erase this part. This part here is your f of x, right? That's what y is, it's f of x. So what this question is asking you to do when they say solve for those, right? They're saying when is f of x greater than 0? When is the function above the x-axis? When is y positive? And what you do for these, you put these in a number line in your graph form where you make an inequality statement. So what you usually end up doing here, you do exactly these, right? You find the critical numbers, these are the critical points, right? You put this solution on a number line, you go 0, negative 1, negative 2, and here's negative 3 over 2. And because this is just greater than, it doesn't have the equal to sign at the bottom. You put an open circle here and you put an open circle here because those are your critical values. And when is y f of x greater than 0? If you look at these two points, y is greater than 0 up here and up here. So you go this way and this way, right? And you shade in these areas. So the same type of question is being given to you by using inequalities. And the way you make the statement is this, you find your two critical numbers, okay? And you go, you put your x in the middle, you take the smaller number, you put it on this side, and you put the bigger number, you put it on this side, and you say, oh, if x is greater than negative 1, f of x is greater than 0, or if x is less than negative 3 over 2, then x is greater than 0. And that would be your answer, okay? In terms of inequality, okay? I really went that through that speedy Gonzales style, right? I hope it was coherent enough. If you're working on these things, or you're a math mathematician, no. I'm not a mathematician. I am a geophysicist, though. That's my training. That's my education. I did work in the field for like 10 years. And I did my math minor, but I don't consider myself a mathematician. I haven't contributed anything new to the field of mathematics. I did contribute a little bit to the field of geophysics, right? But I like teaching math. Could you help me with the statistics topic? Liam, yeah, you ask if we could do something, yeah? Let me see. Or that was someone else asked as well if they had a question. So I'm done with this. Stats, Liam, as long as it's not hard, course stats for sure. That's cool. Yeah. And ag, I believe you were asking to do a math problem as well. So ag, if you have it, for sure, let's do it. Is the notation I mean to write the function? Is the notation I mean to write the function? To a certain degree. Basically what this notation means is when x is greater than negative one, right? When x is greater than negative one, here, let's do this in a different color. When x is greater than negative one, f of x is above the x, above the x-axis. And when x is less than negative one, the function is above the x-axis. Thank you for explaining this. It is helpful and a great, my pleasure, merely, human. Thank you for asking the question. Could you possibly help me with hypothesis testing and hypothesis testing and statistics? I'm not really sure what that entails, Liam. What do you mean, hypothesized testing? You mean trying to figure out if a data set, if the model you have is within plus or minus 2.5? What do you call it? Percentage? For the number being accurate? There's a whole bunch of stuff versus that. I've got to review that material, the terminology for it. I've forgotten a lot of it. I'm going to take this down again. If there's any questions about this, let me know. One-tailed and two-tailed testing, yeah. Liam, I have to review my material to be able to help you with that. I haven't done the one-tailed and two-tailed testing for hypothesis to see if the data sets fits the model for 18 years, unfortunately. Unfortunately. They took hard-core statistics out of the math curriculum in my part of the world, unfortunately. And I was very pissed for two reasons, because to understand the world around us, you need statistics. You need to be able to analyze data. The other reason is, I was getting my statistics kick by teaching statistics. And they took that away from me. So I wasn't doing a lot of stats, which was, I was pretty pissed, actually. That's the reason I said I'm going to create a whole series on statistics. Because once we build enough enough content where I can link everything up, then I can sit down and lay down the statistics sort of module that we want to create. Yeah, sorry I can't help you, Liam, on that front. I wish I could, brother. Maybe this summer, I'll sit down and go over my stats and refresh myself and learn the terminology again, build up the module that we need for it. I'm from UK, so we may call it something different. No, the one-tail and two-tail testing is exactly what we call it here as well. But there's a whole process involved with it, and I don't remember the algorithm really, if you want to think about it. It's an algorithm to do it. I like these things when they're super dirty. It means we've done a lot of work, ghetto-style mathematics. We don't even have the chalk, what do you call it, eraser thing? You're a saint for doing this, Kim. I don't know, doggie. I do it for selfish reasons as well, right? I want our societies to improve. I'm sick and tired of this insanity. And as far as I'm concerned, the more people that are literate in the language of mathematics, the better our societies will be, right? So it's a long game I'm playing. It's a long game, right? I'll do this for as long as I can. Okay, all good. I can whisper you on here. And where was Ag? If you have that math question you wanted to work on, post it. Oh no, that was Einstein stuff. There's somebody that, or maybe what was Liam? Oh, Liam, I couldn't help you up with your math question. Oh, that's brutal. That makes me want to go hardcore and put the time in to learn or to relearn. I took a fair bit of stats, actually, to get my math minor. I had to do it, right? Off-topic question, if you don't mind. Do you have a quick opinion on the philosophy of stoicism as I'm trying to live by it? Okay, I got to look up the definition. I know this word, but I can't remember the definition of it, right? So let me look it up, Liam. Stoicism, what is stoicism? All these isms, I keep on forgetting about it. Stoicism is a school of Hellenistic philosophy, which founded by Zeno of Scytium in Athens and early... Okay, we want to know what it is. Let's look up the definition. Okay, is there a quick definition? According to his teachings, as social beings, the path to happiness or blessedness for humans is found in accepting the moment as it presents itself. So living in the moment by not allowing oneself to be controlled by the desire for pleasure or fear of pain, by using one's mind to understand the world and to do one's part in nature's plan and by working together and treating others fairly unjustly, sounds reasonable to me, right? Basically, this philosophy is... sounds like... and I looked at this stuff a long time ago, brother, teaching of Marcus Aurelius. Yeah, okay. So basically, from what I understand, correct me if I'm wrong, it's basically living in the moment, but there should be little disclaimers in that. You can't forget about the past, because we learn about the... we learn history and we have a lot of knowledge from the past that we have to incorporate into our lives, right? And we don't just live for the future, but we look forward to the future. For me, that's my philosophy, right? I try to live in the present, but it's really important to understand the past, and I also look forward to the future, right? So I'm not sure if that fits the teaching or not, and without looking through the future, you cannot form goals. Yeah, were you a professor at some point? No, no. I'm not an academic. I went to university to be able to get the piece of paper I needed to get to be able to do geophysics, okay? And when I was at university, I studied as hard as I could, I took... my electives were hard courses. I didn't take easy courses in my electives, because I was paying for it, right? If I'm there, I want... I want to make the most out of my money, right, and my time. So for me, I just use the system as an instrument to be able to do what I wanted to do in life, right? And I highly recommend people do that. Don't get caught up in the politics of the system. If you know you need to do something to be able to get to wherever you want to do, you have to go through the system, the bureaucracy, whatever it is that you need to do, get it done, right? I'm sorry, another off-topic question, but do you possibly have any books you can recommend for self-help? Self-help. I've never really read any self-help books, Liam. For me, life was the biggest teacher I could get, right? So it... and it kicks your ass. So once you get your ass kicked a few times, you gotta sort of become a little... have a thicker skin, and hopefully you come out of the ass kicking stronger, right? I've read a lot of books which have motivated me, which have helped me process information and stuff, but they're not necessarily self-help books. They're science fiction. They're fantasy. They're politics. They're just thought processes to try to understand what the human nature is all about, right? Why we're here, what our purpose is. And man, there's a lot of books on that, right, that I've read. C.S. Lewis is an amazing writer. I recommend reading C.S. Lewis on that front. Like, read some of his essays, one of them being Fernseed and Elephants. So in my high school days, I read a fair bit of C.S. Lewis, okay? I didn't read 20 books in high school. It was mainly out of high school that I started reading heavy, right? Because high school is not a place to motivate you to do anything really, right? Other than to get through it, right? Happiness, they said, was an exercise of vital powers along lines of excellence in a life according... according to them scope. Martin, where's that from? So Martin says, happiness, quote, they said, was, quote, the exercise of vital powers along lines of excellence in a life affording them scope. I was gonna decipher that, quote. Were you still playing your college? That, no, no, I paid that off a long time ago. For me, I was lucky, right? I got into a program in a field that I was very interested in and it was an honors co-op program, right? I had student debts for sure, right? I had... I forget how much they were in the late 90s or mid early 1990s when I finished. I had probably like 20 grand worth of student debts and I accumulated those student debts and I was in a co-op program where I went to school for four months and I worked for four months. School for four months, work for four months. But I accumulated a little bit extra debt because for a couple of work terms, I ended up taking math courses instead to be able to get my math minor. So I gained the system, right? I won't go into the details of how I gained the system, right? All systems, all centralized systems can be gained, right? Dante. It depends on the severity of your problem, problems. Talking to Liam for self-help. Let me see. I have read Lying the Witch in the Wardrobe. I have it here. Lying the Witch... Where is it? Lying the Witch in the Wardrobe. Somewhere... There it is. Oh no, that's Narnia. Thank you for the insight. You show my pleasure, Liam. I do have another math question if it's not too much. For sure, Liam, ask away. BTC Fly. Rise to the challenge in your life. Preserve and you will overcome and learn and grow. Yeah. Life throws you... Everything could be going hunky-dory mad and or wrenches thrown into the wheels and you're going to hit the ground. Bam! Hard, hard, hard. Hopefully it never happens to any of you guys, really. But that's when you begin to... You're going to make mistakes. You're going to go against your core beliefs. You're going to do things which you regret, right? When you get hit that hard, life challenges you, right? Once you make all those mistakes, once you realize you're on a wrong path, on a dark path, once you realize you don't want to be that person or live that way and stuff like this and you begin to rebuild and regroup and make yourself stronger. For me, the thing that gets me going is my blood starts boiling and I try to do things about it, right? And learn from your mistakes, man. If you've done something which goes against your core beliefs that you hate about yourself, try to make sure you never do anything like that again, right? So build your life around things that you do not want to do. Build your life around things that you do not want to experience, right? I can't remember where I heard it. You don't know where you heard it? Cool. Hi. Halem Stetvaus. How are you doing? E to the power of infinity is an interesting one to discuss. Also, if you have some examples of functional equations, solving for an unknown function, the gamma function as a function to an expression of the Zeta Phi. Oh my god, BTC fly. I need to kick up my mathematics to the level was that when I was a university to be able to even tackle this stuff? I hate to say it, but it's beyond me right now. The real question though is, is all of this purposeful, purposeless because if after death, there's nothing, then all of it is for nothing. I disagree, Stetvaus. Do you play a video game? Is it purposeless? Right? When the video game is over, is your life over? Some people consider this to be a video game, life to be an illusion, simulation, right? That there is nothing beyond this and there was nothing before this. But that doesn't mean you shouldn't enjoy this. You shouldn't try to challenge yourself. You shouldn't try to experience what you want to experience, right? Being a nihilist sucks, right? Could you help me with trigonometry? Trigonometric differentiate? Oh, Liam, brother. Taking derivatives differentiate, I can help you with trigonometry, but derivatives hardcore calculus I'm not doing right now. For example, differentiating course, secant and log. Oh man, I gotta review my stuff, Liam. I gotta be able to help you out. I don't like saying I don't know it. I can't teach it, but I can't right now. I'm not doing any hardcore stats or calculus, right? That's unfortunately where I am right now in the mathematics that I've been using for the last 15 years. I was teaching a little bit of calculus and hardcore stats 20 years ago, up to 15 years ago. But 15 years ago, they took stats out of my curriculum and they dumbed down the math curriculum in our centralized education system. So I didn't even get exposed to people wanting to learn about calculus. So my abilities, you know, as the saying goes, use it or lose it. I lost it. I have been down that road. It's why I'm so strong. Yeah, Martin, 100%. Makes you stronger, man. It takes a while, but it makes you stronger. Subliminal, pseudonym, how are you doing? What's the new ideas behind that IPCC changing the solar solar forcing model? I've seen internet claims of incorporating solar particle as major contributor to weather. Oh, this stuff, weather. I have no idea what they're talking about is IPCC, model recognized internationally. What's behind the changes to the formula, which I think are coming soon. Subliminal, I haven't looked deep into it. It's hit my radar, but there's so much noise out there regarding data accumulation, data interpretation, data presentation. There's so much noise. I haven't had the time to dig into any of the specifics. If you're on discord, post this question in environment. We have an environment folder under heavy topics. Post this question in there and provide me a link to take me or take us to where they're proposing these formula changes to incorporate the solar activity into their models. And I'll take a look at it because it is something I'm interested in, right? My background is environment, right? The point is to accept that life is ephemeral and fleeing and purposeless. You are here. So enjoy it and give your life purpose. Yeah, it is up to you how you want to live your life. There's no doubt about that, right? But some people get trapped in the loop. They become needless. If there's no external purpose to my existence, then why am I here? Enjoy the ride, as Bill Hicks would say. I don't know. What's supposed to be interesting about e to the power of infinity? The universe will run itself down due to the second law of thermodynamics. Should we just cry about this and not bother? Why try to go to Mars? Because it'd be super cool. See if you already believe that life is purposeless because the hospital's rules are interesting. Sorry, teacher. Not personally trying to throw. No, but Liam, brother, if I wasn't so busy, I would have hopped on the calculus train a long time ago, man. I just haven't had time, especially with the stuff going on in the world. For me, I have to organize, prioritize. We talked about this for the videos we put out regarding how to study. I prioritize what I'm going to focus on. My life is already filled with a lot of mathematics. So I focus on that with these live streams with my students and building math curriculum, the videos, and all this jazz. But I can't do all mathematics. That means I haven't been able to spend the time to relearn the calculus and the statistics. Because there's so much stuff going on in the world with the economics, with politics, with the environment, I had to prioritize and allow some time to deal with those things as well. Like Julian Assange, important to me, important to the whole world. So it requires a little bit of spending time on. How are you feeling about Julian? I mean, it's good. What we know is being made news, but doesn't mean anything for Julian. It does mean something for Julian. I think Julian Assange, because he was locked up in isolation, he didn't know how much effort was being put in from the outside world to try to free him. I think once you see that there's energy being put in, hopefully as much as you have put in to try to enlighten the world as to what the powers that we are doing to our societies are doing to the world. Once you see people working their asses off, trying to free you and that have taken your teachings and they're taking it to heart and incorporate it into your life, that energizes you. Like for me, when I get comments, people saying, oh, Chichou, thank you for the math videos. You helped me pass high school. You helped me get my GED. You helped me get into this program. You helped me do this. When I've had people send me stuff saying how much I've helped them, either with ASMR, math videos, comic books, cooking, whatever it might be. I'd have people send me pictures of their lives changing. That motivates me. You have no choice but to continue. So I think it means a lot for Julian. I might have missed you talk on this Saturday. We talked a little bit about it already. And of course, we have our playlist. Julian Assange and Wikileaks playlist, where we've got multiple hours of stuff that we've talked about this, is a scandal. Julian Assange's case is a scandal. Right? Wow, I missed a lot of chat chat. Purpose is a human subjective quality, not an objective quality of reality. You have the freedom to choose your purpose. And you also have the freedom to decide life has no meaning and don't live it fully. Yeah, for sure. I've had friends that wanted to drink themselves to death. That's fine. Right? Yeah, most things, but it doesn't mean I have to participate because they were my friends, right? I reached a certain point and said, buddy, I'm not on that road. Adios. Yeah, most things you learn you don't really need in real life. That is also your opinion, not fact. Another random question. Do you practice meditation? Some meditation. Yeah, I've done more in the past. The meditation I do, Liam right now is mainly walking meditation. I go for really extensive long walks, not as long as I used to. This has been times where I've gone on, if you're from Vancouver, if you can type this on, on Google Maps or something. I've done walks where I start a Stanley park in the West End and I walk all the way to UBC and I walk back like a 10 hour walk, eight hour walk. Powerful, powerful. I have music, I have snacks, I have notepad and I learned that from doing geophysics. I would spend 10, 14 hours a day outside during the summer times collecting data and by myself in nature walking. It was amazing. Highly recommend. Is the center of earth creating the magnetic field that protects us from the sun radiation? Yeah, the outer core. It's the liquid ions really that are convection currents circulating that carries the magnetic field. That protects us, right? Yes, it stops the sun from eroding our atmosphere. Yeah, Mars has a weak magnetic field and losses atmosphere. Yeah, God saved the magnetosphere. I hear that the polarities are going to change. What are your thoughts? Polarities have switched countless times. Not countless. Well, no, countless times. You know, on a fairly regular basis, right? The North Pole flits over South Pole, the magnetic field switches. You can see that in the striations of the seabed, right? The ferro-metallic minerals are pointing this way and then point that way. This is part of what you learn in geology and geophysics for sure. Can we predict when they're going to flip? Well, there is a frequency to it. There is a period to it, but the period varies by thousands of years, right? Is it going to happen tomorrow? I don't know. I doubt it, right? Is it going to happen within 100 years? I don't know. What's the probability that 1%? 0.05%, right? 10%, right? Is it going to happen in the next 10,000 years? Probably. Should we worry about it right now? I don't think so, right? It's beyond us, right? But there are pole shift catastrophes for sure. There's extinction agendas that correlate to the pole shift catastrophes, right? The pole shift. A lot of animals that use the electromagnetic field for migration stuff, they go through serious changes. And we really don't know during those pole shifts, right? If the Earth's magnetic field doesn't completely collapse, right? But if it deteriorates, then we're going to get major serious solar radiation. Even for a few minutes, few hours, that'll be devastating to living species on the planet, right? So we're not 100% sure. They're like flat Earth, or Electric Universe, they have. That sounds scary. What happened during the last one? Not a lot. Hey, Gicho, always be making, how are you doing? I've watched you for years and I want you to know that I appreciate my pleasure. Always be making. Thank you for coming over and saying it, by the way. I appreciate it. I don't believe you are free to decide your purpose. That's a luxury for a few. Halim, Steph asked to a certain degree, I agree with you. Depending on where you're born, right? But where you're born, you have to be malleable. You have to adjust, right? If you're born in a certain environment, choose a purpose that is going to, if you don't like it, improve your social setting. If you like it, feed into it, right? Enjoying a ride will imply that you are among the ones who are lucky enough to do the cool stuff. I disagree. That part I disagree. What about those who can't? For example, someone whose close relative is heavily mentally disabled, should they enjoy the ride as best as they can? Yeah. If life is purposeless, then they should just put the handicap to hospital and focus on going on. I disagree because there's so little time in one life that it would be silly to waste it. But do you think showing love, caring, compassion, interaction with someone is wasting your time? I don't think so. Caring for those who aren't lucky, right? I totally disagree. The most important thing you can do in this life is have love, right? That to me supersedes going to Mars on a limit basis. Just imagine if they said, hey, what if you have to sacrifice half the planet's population to be able to go to Mars? Would you do it? Hell no. What if they said, hey, can you show love to this person? Would you do it? Hell yes, right? So it really depends, right? Enjoy the ride means do the best with what you've got, where you've been, right? What you know, right? Enjoy the ride does not imply that. No, it doesn't. Thanks, but BTC fly. I think enjoy the ride. Highlights that it's something temporary and to enjoy it while it lasts, remembering that it will end. It will end. It also points to the fact we are only partially in control. Yeah, it's like there's an acronym and not an acronym, but a saying in the gambling community is you got to play the cards your dealt, right? If you're sitting on a poker table, you're getting crap cards. You got to play those crap cards. You can't be envious of the person that's getting a full house. Ace's full house dealt to them, right? You just have to play the best you can with the cards you're dealt and that goes in life as well, right? Coolio, how are you doing? How much did I miss? I'm not sure. We've been going at it for almost two hours now. We started at 1130. It's almost 130 now. We got another two hours to go. We do the best we can with what we've got. That might be what it is to be human. That is what it is to be human as far as I'm concerned. And try to improve and don't use life as an excuse not to do, right? I've seen a lot of people give up. You give up on what, right? You give up on life? You give up? What does that mean, right? I'm guilty of it as well when I was younger. Oh, I give up. And then later on you go, man, I gave up. What a weak, weak little brat I was, right? And sometimes you have to bluff. Here's one thing that every person that has spent any amount of time on a poker table knows. You lose the most with the best hands you've ever had. Okay? So just because you're dealt an amazing hand, that's not a sure thing. Really. I've lost the most amount of money on a poker table with some of the most amazing hands I've ever had. And I have also made a tremendous amount of money on the poker table with some of the crappiest cards I've ever had, right? The cards, sure, they put you in a certain situation, but they do not guarantee success. Okay? That's what it means. Play the cards you're dealt man. Do the best with what you got. Yes, I agree. But if you're getting crap cards, is it just the tyranny of the cosmos? Is there nothing beyond it? Just tyranny that imposes justice? You know what? Robert Anton Wilson said it the best, right? And if you've never listened to Robert Anton Wilson, do so, right? The universe doesn't give a rat sass about you. And if you think the universe cares of what happens to you, you're delusional, right? The universe is not just injustice. The universe is just is, right? Period. That's it. Oh, good. I didn't show up at the end of it. At least no, Kulia. Another couple of hours. Life is unfair, but life is brutal. Life is brutal. People, we have to appreciate that. Life is brutal. But that brutality doesn't mean you shouldn't participate in it, right? I'm an educator, and my seniors are really having trouble with this. They just don't believe they should have to do anything or want to do anything. And in a way it is heartbreaking. Always be making... I agree. Trying to motivate my students is probably one of the hardest things I have to do. First thing I have to explain to them with my students is they're not bad at mathematics, and mathematics is not magic. The next thing I have to try to do is get some work ethic into them. Trying to motivate them to do work. Just imagine trying to motivate people to live their life, right? To make sure they're successful and happy and have everything at their disposal, right? This is because of our centralized education system. It is pure crap, right? For me, being alive is a chance to probe mathematics and computation. It's a world of near infinite possibilities. Giving up means you cannot explore that with a comfortable life to support it. You have to work, provide value, pay your rent, buy your time so you can work on what you choose. Yeah. Basically, buy your freedom. One thing I highly recommend, front-end load your work. If you want to do a project, don't linger, don't procrastinate, and try to get it done at the last minute. If you need to do something, put it in. Get it done, right? Reach the altitude you need to reach, then coast, right? Front-end load your work. Chichou, have you ever played the game called the Talos Principle? No, I don't think so. I'm playing it right now because they have a DLC I wasn't aware of. I think you really enjoy. I've never played it. I don't know it. Spider-Man, truth. It's a game that goes heavily into philosophy and what it means to be human. Oh, wow. That sounds super cool. Super cool, Coolio. Can you post a link on this? Do we have a gaming folder on Discord? I hope so. If we don't post it in the general folder, either me or one of the mods can create a folder for gaming and we can post it there. Sounds cool. Hi, Chichou. Hey, saucy, Rossy. How are you doing? Oh, wow. Chats picking up. The universe is everything and nothing. Life is brutal and it's incredible. Spider-Man, well said. Universe doesn't care about you at all. You are not special. You have to work to make your life full of purpose and accomplishment. Enjoy work and work hard. But that's the thing. I know we're never going to agree on this and it's quite normal because this is the most sensitive subject. If the cosmos is just inert or if there is a God, I do believe God exists. So I guess that's what we disagree upon to the end. Halim? Sure. Then it's okay to disagree. I agree with you there. For sure. Doing work well leads to a better life. Yeah, it gives you, it's satisfying. The direction of modern society is heading of consumerism, maybe even narcissism through facade of social media. I'm really fearful to bring children into this world. Or am I just overthinking too? I think you're overthinking it too much, Liam. This is just the blip that we're seeing right now. Like, there's a lot going on. Don't get me wrong. Liam, you've been around for a while here. There's a lot going on, right? But for me, I have no problem with people wanting to bring children into the world, right? And raise children. The trick is this. It's going to take a lot of work to make sure if you're going to be a parent or a guardian that your kids are not going to be a burden upon you and society. So you have to be proactive, right? If you're going to decide to bring children into this world, take the responsibility to raise them properly, right? And that requires a lot of time, a lot of commitment, a lot of energy, a lot of funds, a lot of trauma, right? Personally for me, I'm too selfish for that crap. I have no desire. I'm not a DNA type of person. Oh, I need my DNA passed on to someone. For me, it's ideas that matter, not my genetic structure, right? In the end, sorry for my bad. Halim, no worries about your bad English or your English. I didn't think it was bad English. Merely human. Some of that is misinformation. Some is understanding. Many youth today think they have plenty of time to fix issues that are to come. Secondly, they believe the system will take care of their weak aspects. What they don't realize is that if they are in an educated environment, they are the higher tier of individual already. I've talked with people where I met someone that had gone to university and they accumulated a lot of debt. And they had recently graduated. This was in the last couple of years, right? So they had recently graduated in the last three, four, five years, right? And they told me how much debt they had to go, oh man, why do you accumulate so much debt? Like your student debts are not wiped out because of our centralized education, some banking oligarchs, they passed laws where you can't wipe out your student debts, which is insane to me, right? And they said, oh, they thought that the government would step in and eliminate all student debt so they be debt free. And I went, who told you this? These governments are not going to eliminate your student debt unless you have a full blown revolution happening where you overthrow the banking oligarchs. I go, are you willing to do that? Are you participating in that actively? And they weren't, right? So they were hoping that something would happen to make their life choices disappear, right? And they got an education, and they're an amazing person, by the way, but they went and got an education as something which they hadn't looked into to see if there was any job prospects of what the pay structure would be or anything like this. So for a hobby, because it was something they loved, they went into ridiculous debt, hoping that the system would remove that burden from them. That's a lot of hope put into the wrong places, right? Gang, I want to scroll down a little bit just to catch anything that says chicho. I'm sorry if I'm missing anything. Gaming is there. Awesome, Spiderman. Thank you. So we do have a gaming folder. So I'm just going to scroll down just because there's a lot of chat going on and I'm missing a fair bit of it. Some stuff pointed towards me. I'm merely human. When looking out at the world, something to consider is that our lifespan is quite short. So trends of thinking do not indicate the long-term behavior of humanity. You should not include the factor into your children's rearing choice. As chicho said, be willing to pay the price for your goals of having well-adjusted children by teaching them. If you're having children, the best place you can invest in is your children. Mental, physical, emotional well-being. If you're having children and you're taking most of your disposable income and putting it into Wall Street, you're out of your mind, period. You're out of your mind. Take those funds, put it into your children. May it be through education, may it be through buying good food, may it be putting them into the right programs for them to be educated, may it be getting tutors, may it be buying the right books, whatever it may be. Going traveling, showing nature, taking them camping, explaining to them what it means to be able to survive. Chicho, why is it that student that is the only that not erased by bankruptcy? It doesn't make sense. Oh, Kulio, it makes sense if you're the banking oligarchs. Because there's multiple reasons for it, by the way, Kulio. Chomsky laid it out a few years ago. One of them, and the multiple people have talked about this, take this. So centralized government comes into power, controls a lot. And then they work with the centralized education centers. And there's a revolving door here where people go into government, go into private corporations, go into government, go into private corporations. Now, this centralized education center may be a university, college, whatever it might be. It has corporations giving it money. It has corporations giving it equipment. They're in partnership with corporations. Now, what do corporations need? Corporations need dedicated, committed employees that are fearful of being fired so they can work their asses off over time to try to make money for the corporation. That's what most corporations want. Dedicated employees that will sacrifice their freedoms for the corporation and work their asses off to try to make money for the corporation. And they're in partnership with the universities. The universities have a revolving door with government. So long story short, passes, time passes, and government comes into power and says, we're going to guarantee student loans. Okay. Great. Everybody says great. We want to go to school. We don't have money. I want to study basket weaving 2000. I want to get a four year degree in it. And I don't have the money. And I really don't want to go to work. And I really don't know what else to study. So this is what I love. So I want to go to university, get that degree, right? Government said, we'll give you the money. Just apply for it. We'll give you thousands of dollars to go to this university to get that degree. This university knows that the money's coming. They raise their tuition fees, right? What do they do? They buy land, right? They do political activity. They take money and put it into Wall Street. They buy art, right? So all this money coming into these universities, these universities are building capital, right? And over time, what happens? The cost of education becomes higher and higher. The government is guaranteeing the student loans, right? So Joe Bleu is going here, getting their student, getting their degree in basket weaving. Meanwhile, they're 50 grand, $100,000 in debt, right? What do they got to do? They got to get a job because interest starts kicking in within a few months. They got to service the debt. What do they do? They go to the corporations and beg them for a job. The corporations say, sure, we'll give you a job, right? Here's what you're going to make. Here's how much overtime you're going to work. You're going to get no benefits. You better be here on the weekends because you need to pay back your debt. What do we call it? Access to the evil, right? Basically, it's enslavement, servitude, right? What's happened with our current education system is governments are guaranteeing student loans and they're not allowing people to declare bankruptcy if they can't service that debt, right? What happens? The universities are grateful for it because they can charge higher fees. The corporations are grateful for it because they have dedicated employees that need to service major debt, right? To be able to live their lives because if they don't service that debt, that debt carries with them for the rest of their lives, right? It's an enslavement process designed to feed corporations with employees that will work their asses off for them, right? It's a scam, right? Now mind you, getting a university degree is not a scam. Getting an education is not a scam. You just have to be very wise about what type of degree you're going to get, what type of debt you're going to go into. Many people have said this before, government guarantee of student loans should be abolished, period. Get the centralization of education out of education because centralization of education is not education, it's indoctrination, it's enslavement, okay? I'm going to scroll down, gang. Sorry about that. I go off on things and I don't catch the talk. Hopefully some people already mentioned this, I'm just scrolling. There's some financial, financial slaver is real. Financial slaver is real. Debt servitude is real, right? Don't become a debt slave, okay? Clint Tante. What a thing to read. Tante's laughing ass off. Clint Eastwood just endorsed Mike Bloomberg for president, my God. Hilarious, hilarious. And Clint Eastwood used to be the mayor of Pebble Beach where they have the golf tournament. I've been there in California, coastal California, and it was a nice pretty town. Too bad. I like Clint Eastwood, but whatever it is, what it is. Never went to pop. Martin, you didn't go to pop. Good, good, good. Stay away from your work on your days off. Really, got one Clint. But as you said earlier, the same way the universe is merciless towards you and too big and too strong to rebel against it, maybe you can't rebel against human societies which function upon the masses. But Halim, what you can do is share as much as you can, right? There's a reason why platforms, governments, central institutions censor information, right? Because if we really truly had a free flow of information and dialogue and trade, these conflicts would not exist. As Julian Assange says, right, has said in the past, if wars can be started with lies, then peace can be started with truth, right? I'm paraphrasing, I believe, anyway. Debt and credit is not bad. Debt and credit used wrongly is bad. Overstretching yourself is bad, if you can. Yeah, Bertie here, I agree with you. Be wise about where you decide to go, why you decide to go on debt for, right? If you're going into debt for thousands of dollars to get a degree in basket weaving, not a good idea. Create value within yourself and you don't have to worry. Yeah, Dante, is that a bad thing? Sorry, I'm not aware, Martin. Mike Bloomberg is, I won't say it. Why do you know about Asata Shakur? Asata Shakur, Asata Shakur, he uses a two-packs ant, right, that went to Cuba. How could someone escape the CIA like that in a tiny island like Cuba? How was Assange even captured? Assange came out and said he took bad advice, right? He took the advice of his lawyers at the time, saying, hey, listen, there's stuff going on. Should he leave the UK and go back to Australia? And his lawyer said, no, no, no, there's no way they can touch you here and then the shit at the fan, right? So be careful where you take advice from as well. If you can't manage your finances, make good financial decisions that avoid debt and credit. Yeah, Verdi here agreed. And keep in mind, in our current economic system, you need to invest, okay? May it be in yourself, in your family, in your community, or anywhere else, okay? Don't live day-to-day, week-to-week on a paycheck coming in. That's a bad way to live. Do people even want the free flow of info? They do, for sure. Nick, Nick Affile. Yeah, they do. Yeah, there's a lot of people plant, you know, brainwash because of a centralized education system pushing for, oh, censor this person, censor this, censor this person. But those people are really free-thinking human beings. They're tools, right? In regards to this decision, do you think the world is fair because it is unfair to everyone? I don't think the world is unfair to everyone. The universe, sure, the universe is not selective. The universe doesn't give a rat's ass, right? Like, look at Steve Jobs. He died of cancer, right? And from what I understand, he died of cancer because he made the wrong decisions. He decided to go homeopathic instead of taking care of business, right? So your class, the universe doesn't give a rat's ass about your class structure, right? Yes, but the real reason why Sange is in that state is because most people don't give a damn about him. Most people are brainwashed by the centralized media, right? Most people are not concerned with that. They just want to enjoy their life. Alim, most people are not enjoying their lives. Most people are under tremendous amount of stress. They just haven't realized what is the cause of their stress, right? Chico, do you think credit is more harmful than good? No, I don't think so, Julio. I think credit is okay. I think credit is okay, in my opinion. I always have seen credit cards as a scam. Credit cards, if you're carrying debt on credit cards, yeah, that's crazy, right? But credit doesn't necessarily have to mean financial credit. Like, I have a lot of credit with a lot of people, right? It's not necessarily money credit, right? I have goodwill credit with a lot of people, right? That to me is huge, right? And I work my ass off building up that credit, right? I don't like spending money. I don't have. Regardless of it, I can pay it off. The principle works against human psychology and gives them a false idea that they have more money because they have credit. Then they use credit scores to bar you from certain things and segregate population by class. Julio, I 100% agree. That's the way our economic system is set up. But it's not necessarily because our economic system is set up that way. It's because our education system does not educate people regarding finances, personal finances, right? It's horrendous. It actually does the opposite. It does a tremendous amount of damage regarding personal finances, right? He's a snake in sheep's clothing. I hope you're not talking about a science because I don't care about his personality. I care about what he's done, the improvements he's made to the world. And man, holding power accountable is number one in my book. One of my number ones in my book. Bloomberg is basically Trump, but worse. Yeah. He's buying his way into the election having already spent 500 million on ads. Pretty much everyone who knows it, his record, hates Bloomberg. Yeah. And Bloomberg is not going to go anywhere. Bloomberg is 15 minutes of fame. No one in their right mind really gives a rat's about Bloomberg. He's a nobody, right? And I have so much to learn and Chico only streamed twice a week sat down. Sorry, Liam. Just this week is twice so far. We're probably going to do one later on this week as well. But one thing I really want to do this week is set up, do my setup so we can start doing the comic book readings. We got to get that done. I promise people that I'm going to start in February. We're almost at the end. We've got to get that done. But he's bombarding the airwaves and that unfortunately convinces a lot of people to vote for Dante. I don't think he's going to, he's going to go anywhere. I could be wrong, but I don't think he's going to go anywhere. He might, he might come up and say Clinton is, is, is this vice president choice, right? And then the Clinton machine and all this and the mainstream media, they might be able to pull it off. And then as soon as they pull it off, then I'm pretty sure Bloomberg is going to be put on the, the death list and Clinton becomes president. Free transmission of all information is what will free us 100%. Always be making. I can never send my kids to public school. Yeah, public school. It's not really about public school or private school. I know a lot of private private school, which are crap, just pure crap. Right? You have any friends who's a merchant of any kind? They, they all operate based on the advantage of knowledge. I'm not sure how that plays out. Good thing he posts all of his live streams on bitchu or YouTube. And there's tons to watch. Yeah. Home schooling. Home schooling is a good way to go, but you, it's a huge responsibility. By the way, homeschooling is not as easy. I'm going to homeschool my kids. Children need discipline, children need guidance, children need interaction of like there, you can do homeschooling, but there's homeschooling done right and there's homeschooling done wrong. It, it's not about public school. It's not about private school. It's not about homeschooling. It's not about unlearning. It's not about any of these isms systems or anything like this. It's about love. Krishnamurti, read Krishnamurti's book, Education and the Significance of Life. Right? The proper education for anyone requires caring, compassion, love, understanding. Okay. Playing paper and, uh, paper and pencil games 10 times more educated. Yeah. Cancer will take many of us. Cancer will take many of us. Every big company buys a credit. None will really pay pro forma. Credit needs to be used right. If used wrong, it's very harmful. Yeah. It's in, in, in slaves people. Liam says, brilliant to cool you. My Sunday has been prepared for binge watch. So what do you know about Asata sleepy waves? Asata have listened to some of her stuff. She was, she was framed basically by the FBI. She was part of Black Panthers. They tried to hunt her down. She went to Cuba and has been an activist there. I'm moving my family to an Austrian forest to prevent cancer. So no one gets cancer there. I swear. Face on it. This guy, this guy is show statistics. Thank you for the information. I'm pale to begin with. Oh, more chat. Okay gang, I want to scroll down again unless I see that, that, that. So why is a man with no name supporting her? Plenty of people get cancer in Austria. Blue moon, blue, blue. Awesome flat. You can be very knowledgeable and conscious of the flaws and scams of the system. In order to change the rules, you need, you need people to get, uh, informed in the correct way and Halim just regarding this change the rules. You don't need to change the rules. You can decide not to participate in that system. Right. Non participation is one of the most brilliant ways of activism and creating new systems and enjoying life. Refuse to participate in that system. Right. But the good information is like noise in a clunk that is basically the mainstream media. Uh, that is the property of billionaires whose interest is to keep people ignorant. So you can't win except with a coup d'etat. No, I disagree. And even then you would be seen as an evil troublemaker who went against their opinions. No, I disagree, Halim. It's, it's not just coup d'etat. I just refuse to participate in the system and straight out mainstream corporate propaganda. I really, aside from a certain age group, certain get this focus, a certain group of people, I don't really know too many people that may actually, no, not true. I know some people that are totally brainwashed with the different platforms they interact in. Right. They think they're educated because they're online and they're hooked up and you know, they've got an education, they got a degree and they do high tech stuff, but then they consume garbage. Right. They, they read, you know, the main source of news is the Guardian. It's like, oh my God, that's your main source of news or they watch Seattle. Oh my God. Right. But with my students, very few of them buy into the BS of the corporate media. Right. If you're, if you're choosing to be willful or ignorant, then it's your choice. But don't expect people to participate in that system. It's not good. No, I don't think so either. In 1926, they said the same thing about A.H. Thankfully, Bloomberg embarrasses himself every time he's on stage, but as long as he pumps those millions on misleading ads without facing scrutiny, he can get votes. His campaign spending has broken all records. There's no precedent for how far this kind of spending can take you. Dante, keep this in mind. Clintons spent a billion dollars in the 2016 elections. Trump barely spent a couple of hundred million. People said, in general, throughout the last few decades, whoever spent the most got elected. That's changed because of the flow of information. Right. Based on a few decades ago, Clintons, the Democrats should have won because they spent way more money. They didn't. So it's not how much money people are spending anymore that decides the future of, you know, if they're going to be prosperous or not. Right. Pretty much every candidate in presence of South States, Bloomberg and Biden, they crack me up. Those people should be in jail. If he buys his way into the nomination, I've lost all hope of recovery from American politics. It's DNC. It's Democratic Party. I don't know. Don't put your faith in them. That is going to happen, but still the fact that it is possibly at this point is frustrating. Yeah, I feel the same way basically. Yeah, I'm kind of scared to get into the real world finance now. Finances now. Liam, the world financial situation is an interesting place to be. Family folk and faith. Thank you. Okay. I want to scroll down. Family folk and faith. Yo, let's go. Void, how's life? How are you doing? Okay, gang. I scrolled down all the way to the bottom again. I was getting lost in the conversations because I need to have, I need to pop an apple with a little bit of peanut butter on it. Nice. What are you guys eating? You guys have snacks? By the way, we did a little bit of mouth mask. We haven't done too much. Very good. Apple and peanut butter. Very delicious. Plant protein. Homemade, avoid homemade pizza and wings. Nice. I should eat greens, man. Well, hopefully you put some greens on your pizza. For sure, put some greens on your pepsi. Don't drink pepsi. That'll destroy your teeth. Be right back. I'm going to cut, cut up some apples and bring my peanut butter and jar nicely. Too funny. Gijo, who did you see that the free Assange protesters projected the Chelsea Manning video onto parliament? Almash Prince last week. You know what? I don't know who it was, but I loved it, Kulio. I loved it. I posted that link in our discord page on their politics, so I thought that was brilliant. Just imagine if people all around the world started projecting the collateral murder video. By the way, for those that don't know, there's a group of people that went into London and projected sort of a video they had on the collateral murder video onto what building was it in London? Bring it to the forefront. If people are stuck at home watching garbage television, cable corporate propaganda, project the stuff. Bring them out. Lay it on everywhere. Graffiti but hardcore. Is it good? I could go try some now. Apple and peanut butter? It's absolutely amazing. It's absolutely amazing. Look at this. Look at this. It's absolutely amazing. I'm putting a little bit too much peanut butter, but yeah. Look at that. So good. I'm going to get ready for bed. See you, Gijo. Have a good dream. Thanks for being here, Dante. Sweet dreams. Sweet dreams. You seem like he helped you, Gijo. Do you exercise also? Yeah, as healthy as I can. And sometimes I do a fair bit of exercise. I try to, but there's periods in my life where I don't. A couple of months out of the year, and I start getting aches and pains, and then that motivates me to do more exercise, right? So I try to stay active. Word of advice. Unless you're very active, never try a keto diet. My buddy. It was parliament building, and then some other people, maybe some group, did the same thing on the side of Belmosh bread. Oh, nice. Awesome. Coolio. Bad thing, bad, bad thing. Darth, just to let you know, you can't post any links on our chat unless you're a modern myself, okay? Apples are good for your digestion. Yeah. I see many people who go to the gym recommend peanut butter. It's good for protein. Yeah. Bad luck. I never felt like I've experienced sugar withdrawal like I did on keto. I would sweat walking through the snack aisle at the grocery store. I don't even eat that much sugar. Wow. Same. I was on the keto for two to three months and then couldn't keep up with it. Say hi back. Oh, conky. I'm going to call you conky. How are you doing? Do you drink beer? I stopped drinking beer. Every now and then I take a little sip or two. Every now and then I crave a little beer and I go have like one beer. Not really. Okay. I find beer. I've gone through peers where I've had a lot of beer obviously, right? But I find beer just too bloating for me. I'm going to low bro you out right now. I'm out of here. I didn't. Darth, thanks for popping by. Keto can send a cass cost the roll. Crustral, I'm assuming that says. Crustral high and interfere with sleep. Best to avoid refined sugar and eat plenty nutritious fruits and vegetables. Yeah. I'm with fly. I like fruits and veggies. I got a question for you. What's 9-eleven? 9-eleven? According to Bush Jr. It was the start of World War three. Please stop talking about beer. Martin currently having an existential crisis. So much time on the dribble of social media when I could devote it that time standing. Liam, what's your social media? If you're on, like here's one thing you should do on social media. If you're on social media, which I am as well, I don't get, I try not to get involved in the noise. It's very tempting. Man, it's very tempting just to get in. And I have in the past just discussions with people and you learn a lot, right? Sometimes people call you out for spreading BS that you didn't know it was BS and then they provide information. You're like, oh, wow, that's good. But on social media, start consuming content, which is original content from individual sources, not corporate propaganda, not from centralized institutions, but individuals and original content. Forget about the noise that follows the original content. Consume the original content. If that interests you, read some of the comments. But original content is where it's at. Okay. Broccoli has sulfo-fane. Garlic has allicin. Both have cancer-preventing properties. Yeah. Blueberries, too. Blueberries are antioxidants. Big time. A lot of fruit. A lot of fruit has lots of amazing antioxidants. Close Facebook. Yeah. Thoughts on kombucha. Kombucha good. Or the health effects. No, I don't think it's pseudoscience. It's good for the tummy. Kombucha is good. And chud. Chud is kombucha made with honey. It's only 10 p.m. I can still go to the pub. Martin, are you craving it? I know, brother, when I was hanging around doing the whole club pub scene for a long time. Too long. Even the people I was partying with that used to work that worked in the places would still go there because it's part of your life. It's part of your routine. Very hard to break. Very hard to break. Very hard to break, as you probably know, Martin. Fight the urge. Drink some water and pretend as super light beer. Drinking tea with soy milk. Nice. That's good. That's a copy. Your jumper. Konki, what's up? Hi, how are you doing? You know, mods? Should we take care of Liam? Did I get it? Oh, thanks. Thanks, Spider-Man. What did we delete? Oh, I didn't even catch that. Thanks, Liam. And thanks, Spider-Man. Appreciate it for taking care of business. Nice. With nine lemon, they were so quick to rush away the steal and bury in China. Yeah. Yeah. Get rid of the evidence, right, flyer? What advice would you give to your 19-year-old self? What advice would I give to my 19-year-old self? Don't be stupid. Treat people with respect. Don't drink so much. Ask out that girl that you really want to ask out. Be kinder, right? Even though I was fairly kind. The two main ones, I would say, don't drink as much and put your heart out there, right? Ask out the people. Seek out the company that you're desiring. Don't let it just be fantasy, right? Get your shit together. Don't waste time with negative people. Don't do drugs. As Bill Hicks would say, I'm not promoting it, but I'm not denying it, right? Things. Fly. Yikes, Spider-Man says. Wow. Big surprise. The guy with a racial slur in his name was a troll. Was it a racial slur? I didn't even catch it. Don't be stupid. Thank you for the advice. If you're going to do drugs, then the nature made ones are better for you than the madmen. Yeah, stay away from pharmaceuticals. Stay away from pharmaceuticals unless you're seriously ill and you need serious doses of stuff. Whatever you do, don't make pharmaceuticals a part of your daily routine. Not a good idea. Okay, some drugs can be conscious expanding. I will agree. But avoid addiction. Addiction is huge. And if you're interacting with people who have serious addictions, and usually you don't realize people have addictions until later on down the road, don't feed their addictions. I rarely can take part because my buffering is too low. But I do snuff tobacco a lot. Be careful. Chewing tobacco Not good either. Thank you, Mod. Nice one. Thank you, Mods. It even drains my hunger. Cannabis can help with creativity and for me, concentration. But overuse leads to psychosis, which is a serious medical emergency. Fly. I agree. And everything is not for everyone. There isn't a single thing that everyone should do. Okay. So know, know thyself, right? Yeah, if you need it, if you need prescription drops, pharmaceuticals, take it. But don't make it a daily routine. Unless you really have to. Unless there's chemical imbalances and whatnot, right? Unless there's, you know, things you need to deal with. The trolls are out, Spiderman. Thank you for taking care of business. Educate yourself. How to make, how to make girls like you, how to make someone you're interested in like you, educate yourself, show love, show compassion, listen, right? It's not that hard. Really. Haleem, I was skeptical with marijuana, so I tried it because it wasn't supposed to be that hurtful, right? Worst decision of my life, even natural stuff. Psychotropics are psychotropics. Okay. It amplifies stuff in your brain that you sometimes don't want to let go. Anxiety hit me hard back then. I live the nightmare. Okay. It's not for you. And by the way, there's this whole thing where people say, oh, they get paranoid when consuming cannabis and stuff like this. And my reply to many people is maybe you should be paranoid, right? Now you're a true mod. Oh, was that your first band, Spiderman? Nice. My interest has been piqued so much on these topics. I want to learn so much, but I don't know where to start on what subject. Cannabis only leads to psychosis in extremely rare cases in people who are predisposed to conditions like schizophrenia. Be careful with that. And I agree that overuse of anything isn't good, but be careful with the info. Yeah, that's all of you. Nah, that's all. I wish I could remove my libido so I can ignore this. I'm going to Sorry, Liam. Message got held back. Okay, Spiderman, go take care of business. So no math discussion. We did one math discussion of oranges or little mandarins. Are you guys still munching? Actually, these would go great without. Let's make a pancake orange sandwich, chocolate chip pancake orange sandwich. Halime, if you want to talk about math, drop it and drop your questions and we'll deal with it. I mentioned this before. If you have math questions, no matter what we're talking about, bring it up, right? More math maybe, for sure. Let's do mathematics or being in bad mindset. What time is it now? My battery died. Oh no. I think I'm responsible for initiating us, steering so far off topic. Sorry, no, no worries, Liam. It is an open discussion and this is sort of a stream we're doing in support of during this time so politics can come into play, for sure, but main focus, mathematics. If you guys have math questions, for sure. Ask and we'll deal with it, right? Some people remember and honor the courage of Assange. For sure, Hellfire. How about some more coronavirus? We will be. I've been collecting the data, Kulio. Is there an exponential growth yet? According to the official numbers, no. However, the official numbers now we can pretty much confirm that the official numbers that are coming out are flawed, right? Which really plays out in a nice way when it comes to doing any type of statistical analysis, you have to have faith in the numbers to be able to be able to do accurate interpretation of the data. If the data is flawed, then you can't really come up with a nice model. You can speculate as to what's going on, but it's not, you can't rely on the data to make predictions into the future. We will take a look at the data probably in a couple of weeks. I was hoping we're going to do it this week, but because the data is so flawed right now, I'm waiting for a couple of more weeks to go by until we can see a sort of a trend happening or get more accurate information coming out of other countries, right? Now, for example, regarding, I guess it's called COVID-19 now, India has confirmed only three cases and it's been three cases for like two weeks now. Now, I personally don't believe that, right? If it was exponential, it would have spread much further right now. Yeah, I don't think this, but it's, we don't know. Right now, we have to hold off and for a couple of weeks to get more data, okay? Right now, one thing I can tell you though, because I've been entering the data on a daily basis, the growth outside of China is more than the growth inside China. So the growth inside China per day is down to, according to the official numbers, is down to two to three percent, right? Three to five percent. The growth outside of China, we're in double digits now, right? It's in the teens. And that tells you a lot. And the death rate is now to three percent. Okay, there was a math question, did I see a math one? If it was exponential, oh no, it was just the growth. Exponential would have been, are you was... No, I use that John Hawkins tracker all the time now. It's saved in my bookmark and I found it through you. Yeah, I've been following that as well. Mostly because it looks like plague two math though. Yeah, it looks, it's a nice interactive math. Yeah, but does the virus grow exponential numbers inside the body? It is. Like the, you know what, we don't know how the virus is behaving. And there is, there's the, I came across one thing. Should I even bring this up? I'll link it on Discord. Okay, there was a video that came up and a leak report that came up that from 2010, 10 years ago, that this guy, I don't even know who this guy is and the report or the leak saying that a bio weapon was going to be released in China. It was going to look like the flu and it was going to spread blah, blah, blah, blah, right. It was interesting. Sure, yeah, they don't know very much about it. I work with a lot of factories based in China importing and exporting globally. The coronavirus has been very interesting over the last few weeks. Yeah, it's crazy birdie here. Yeah, the science of it, the economics of it, the politics of it is playing out in an insanely, incredibly interesting way. I was in Chinatown and Birmingham yesterday, lots of masks wearing Chinese walking around. Yeah, the quarantine on the cruise ship got more people. Yeah, that was insane, what they did. The original number was like five to six people, but they didn't separate those people from the rest of the quarantine and now five people have died and 600 plus people on the ship are infected. Yeah, idiocy. Coolio, pure idiocy. Radiance, lamb, yes I could. Radiance, we got math. Let's do radiance. Could you explain the use of differential equations in order to study growth of any phenomena? Basically differential equations, you're looking at the slope at a specific point, right? How to growth this. Can I get a link to the John Hopkins thing? Sure, here. Let me give you that. Oh, I close mine. Oh, I can open it up again. Here's the link to the John Hopkins thing. Let me make sure I copy it. There you go. Here's a math question. Could you explain standard deviation and integrals to mean no? Coolio. Standard deviation, sure. The engineering math I learned in college was so hard to grasp, yeah. There's only one important question. Who's going to be Negan in the post-apocalyptic labs? There can only be one Negan and that's from Walking Dead, by the way. And Negan is a badass, not a nice guy, but could be your best friend. And while you're at it, explain what I'm ever going to need integrals in my day-to-day. In your day-to-day life, Coolio, it depends on what you do on your day-to-day, right? Shopping? No, you're not going to need integrals. Day-to-day life is different from doing research or engineering, which are not for everyday people. Yeah, it's every day. It really depends on what you do on your everyday basis. Let's talk about radiance. Let's do radiance. Engineering people never need integrals. I assure you, unless you do research, we're all needed. We're all needed. That's part of the story. That's the right question, depends on the kind of engineering, depends on the kind. Okay, let's talk about radiance. Let's do radiance, radiance, radiance. Now by the way, we have a whole trigonometry playlist on YouTube, right? So if you go to my YouTube channel, this should pop up, there's a playlist we have on trigonometry that it's halfway done. And I don't know, there's a few hours of stuff there. And I've explained what radiance are in that playlist. That's the first part of trigonometry. The second part of that series playlist, which is going to be turned into a module I haven't created yet. I need to have the time to be able to create that thing, right? But here's what radiance are. Okay, now trigonometry, let's start off from the basics, right? Trigonometry is basically polynomials that are, oh, it's got to be this way. Up time, what are we up anyway? We're almost into three hours. Yes, nice, nice, nice. Our longest stream was around six hours, six and a half hours, I think, doing a cooking stream, right? Get pizza, please. Make the radiance a pizza? Sure, we'll make it a pizza. So check this out. Trigonometry, a lot of people associate trigonometry with triangles, right? Polynomial that has three angles. So here's trigonometry. Most people associate trigonometry with this, right? That's called the right angle triangle, but it doesn't have to be right angle, but right angle is the best way to go right now, right? And then you have your angle theta here, right? And then the things you have here are a squared plus b squared is equal to c squared. If you're talking about right angle triangles, you have sine theta is equal to a b c. Instead of a b c, let's call this opposite from, ah, no, let's call it a b c. We'll not call it opposite. We'll call it a b c. Apologies if I'm not going to read on the chat. I'm going to go through the trigonometry, speeding on Zalastar, right? So sine of this angle is opposite over hypotenuse, a over c. The cos of this angle is b over c, adjacent over hypotenuse, b over c. And tan of this angle is opposite over adjacent, which is a over c. Now the trigonometry, trig ratios are basically exactly what the word says. They're trig ratios. They're the length of one side relative to the other side, the length of a relative to c, right? And that's your first sort of introduction to trigonometry, the first one being the Pythagorean theorem, right? Now, the reason why trigonometry is so important is not necessarily because they allow us to appreciate right angle triangles. Right? It's because they relate to circles, because we want to understand how circles behave, because circles are the perfect representation of cyclic functions. And cyclic functions are things that repeat, right? Like we live in a basically 24-hour time cycle, right? You get up in the morning, you go through lunch, the evening, you sleep, all morning again, right? 24 hours. The earth goes around the sun in a cyclic nature, 365.25 days, right? So our lives are cyclic, okay? The tides of the ocean are cyclic, right? So there's a lot of cyclic, like a bicycle is cyclic, right? The cyclicality of how we live our lives is everywhere, right? And once you appreciate that, the economic cycle is totally, the political cycle is totally, it's insane, it's everywhere, right? So it's incredibly important for us to understand the cyclic nature of our societies, okay? And nature itself. So for us to be able to understand that, we look at circles, okay? Because circles are the perfect representation of a cyclic system, right? So if you stand here, let's assume you're standing here, if you walk around the circle, oh, you're going to end up here again, and you can do it again, and again, and again, and again, and again, forever and ever, right? Now for us, how do we try to begin to understand the circle, right? Now the way we start to begin to understand the circle is we try to break things down, simplify things, right? In our understanding of the world, what we try to do as human beings, we take things, and we try to simplify them, right? If you're ever a kid, have you ever opened up something, hopefully not anything that was plugged in, but things that are electronic or toys and stuff like this, you open them up to see what's inside of them, right? That's you looking at things, looking at the components of it, right? Trying to figure out how that thing works. That's exactly the same thing we do with the circle. So for us, what we do with the circle to try to understand this thing, we put it on a coordinate system. And the way we set up the coordinate system, let me grab a blue pen so we use a different color. Actually, let's do purple. The way we try to understand the system, we put this on a coordinate system with the center of the circle being at the origin, okay? So we're going to do this. So we put our circle on a Cartesian coordinate system. We're going to call this the x-axis, and we're going to call this the y-axis. If you notice one thing, as soon as we did this, basically what we did was we broke up the circle into four equal parts, right? Cut it like this, cut it like this. This part is basically a reflection here, a reflection here, and a reflection here, right? So what we've done is taken one full circle and made it a quarter easier to understand. Because if we understand what is going on here, right? Then we also understand what is going on here. We also understand what is going on here. We also understand what is going on there, right? Cool. How does trigonometry play into this? This is a circle. This is a triangle. Well, as soon as we put in the Cartesian coordinate system, what we can do is we can go, hey, here's our radius of the circle. Let's call this r, right? And if that's the radius, then what we have here, we can turn this into a triangle and make this a right angle triangle, right? Here's a right angle triangle. And this part here and this part here are your x and y, because this is the x-distance that you've gone along the x-axis. And this part here is the y-distance you've gone around on the y-axis, right? Because this guy here would be here. That's your y right there, right? So your x-y coordinate can decide where you are on the circle, right? Because if you're trying to figure out how you move around the circle, there's two ways of doing it, really. Two main ways of doing it. Two, let's say three main ways of doing it. You could say the radius of the circle is r, and you're going to walk along the arc length of this radius a certain distance to get to here, let's say, right? You could say, oh, I'm going to walk to here. So all you do is say, oh, walk along the circle of radius r at this distance, the arc length, right? Another way you could do it is you could say, go from here this way a certain angle. So if you're on an angle here, theta, you could say you want to go here with a different angle, right? That's one way you can move around the circle. Another way you could find your position around the circle is use the x-y coordinate, because this position here is going to have x2, smudgy. This one here is going to have x2, right? This coordinate here is going to be x2 and y2, a different x-y position, right? So right now, there's three basically variables we have on the circle. We've got an x, we've got a y, we've got an r, and we've got a theta, right? Now what mathematicians try to do is, and human beings in general, we try to simplify a system for ourselves, right? So what we're going to do to try to simplify the system is try to eliminate variables, okay? And one way we can eliminate a variable in the system is by eliminating the theta, the angle in degrees, and we can start referencing this angle in relation to the radius of the circle, okay? Now what I'm going to do right now, I'm going to redraw this, I'm going to declutter this a little bit, okay? So I'm going to draw a circle, I'm going to put a grid on here, okay? And we're going to talk about how you can relate the theta to the radius. Should we erase it or should we keep on working on it? Hello, sorry, I'm back. Hey, Spider-Man, welcome back. Yeah, that's exactly what that is, fly, the way you're writing down, right? x is equal to cos a, y is equal to sin a, and x is equal to r, cos a and stuff, right? So the way it works is this, here. Should we, nah, let's do it on here. Hopefully it's not going to get too busy, it might get a little bit busy, okay? Just a heads up, we might get a little bit busy, but that's okay. As long as you're following it the way we built it, you'll know where everything belongs, right? So one thing I've mentioned before, right? Mathematicians are lazy, okay? Really, scientists are lazy. What you try to do is simplify things as much as you can to try to understand systems. One of the things we do with the circle, right? Is try to set these values as something that we can work with easily, okay? So circle is, it's one of the most complicated and one of the most simplest shapes you can deal with, right? Because there's really one thing that decides the size of a circle, which is the radius, right? And as long as you don't have it on a coordinate system, then you don't care where the center is. Because if I draw a circle that is, here, five centimeters long or with a radius of five centimeters, you guys can create the exact same circle wherever you are, right? If I put a coordinate system on here, it becomes a little bit more complicated because now we have to worry about the center of the circle, okay? So keep that in mind. Let's assume for us right now, because we want to simplify the circle, what we're going to do, we're going to create a circle that we can easily scale up or down, right? So what's the easiest number that you can scale up or down? The easiest number is the number one, right? So what mathematicians ended up doing was referencing R as number one, right? Or not number one, but they're calling the radius as one unit, right? So this guy here is one. The length of it is one. If the length of this is one, what would the coordinates of this point be? What would the coordinates of this point be? What would the coordinates of this point be? Right? If the radius of this thing is one, then this here would be the length one, right? So this coordinate here, let me do a little bit of cleaning up here. Let me take these guys out. We don't need the motions. Take these guys out. Nice. That's simplified a little, right? Let's put our line back here. So if the radius of this guy, the length of it is one, then this coordinate here is one and zero. This coordinate here becomes zero and one. This coordinate here becomes negative one and zero. This coordinate here becomes zero and negative one, right? Based on our Cartesian coordinate system, okay? As soon as you set the radius equal to one, we call this the unit circle, unit circle, okay? We call the unit circle because you can scale this up or down easily, right? Scale it up, scale it down, multiply by one, the radius. It's super easy to do, right? Now take a look at this. If that's the case, let's try to figure out what X and Y can be in terms of an equation, okay? Now I'm going a little bit beyond the radians right now. We're going to incorporate it, link it up with this, right? But here's our angle, right? As who was it that said this? I think it was Fly that mentioned this, right? If we use our trig ratios here, if we want the sine of this angle, right? Where we're going to do this? Let's do this here, okay? If you want a sine of theta here, sine of theta is A opposite over the hypotenuse, right? For here, it's Y over R, Y over R. The cos theta, cos is going to be X over R and tan of theta is going to be Y over X, right? Now keep this in mind. If this is a unit circle where the radius is one, what's R here? R is just going to be one. So this guy here, if we cross multiply this up when R is one, then Y is equal to sine theta and X is equal to cos theta because you're doing cross multiplying that up and that's just a one, right? So on a unit circle, our Y here really represents sine theta and our X here really represents cos theta. If that's the case, right? Then X and Y are just cos theta and sine theta. So our coordinate here just becomes cos theta and sine theta, okay? Just taking a little bit more before we get into the radians, right? So what we ended up doing was taking a circle because we wanted to understand how a circle behaves, right? And put it on a Cartesian coordinate system, broke it down to four quadrants, right? That simplified it because as soon as we understand what's going on here, then the flip of this, mirror this, that's almost the same thing. Well, it is the same thing and then mirror it, same thing, mirror it again, same thing. So as long as we can understand what's going on here and use a little bit of logic, we know exactly what's going on in the whole circle, right? Now for us, we want to simplify a little bit more so we make the radius one to simplify the equations. Y now is sine theta, cos now is X is cos theta, right? So these coordinates here are also in terms of cos and sine, but because we're in a negative quadrant, the cos is going to be negative and the sine is positive because we're here. Now, another layer of simplicity that we introduce to the function is we try to eliminate theta in degrees. We try to eliminate the degrees, right? And the way we try to eliminate degrees, we try to represent the angle relative to the radius of the circle, right? So take a look at this. I'm going to erase these guys up here now because we don't need these guys no more because there's no way I can do that here without getting messy. So we need a little bit of repetition here or dry. Wait, did Chico just say beer? Or am I getting thirsty? Martin, you're getting thirsty. How funny. So let me draw this part, okay? Just this part. Take a look at this. So here's our half circle or quarter circle, right? And then this thing continues, right? My circle sucks, by the way. That's a crappy circle. Let me do a little bit of draw. I'm going to draw half a circle, okay? Let's bring this over. Half a circle. Now here's our radius. Here's our theta. And mathematicians are lazy, so they try to simplify things as best they could, right? So instead of having degrees here, because there's two variables we have here, right? Because if we're standing here and we want to understand or have an appreciation of us moving around the circle, then what we can do is say, hey, go radius r angle theta here. But what we can do is reference angle in degrees and convert this to theta in radians r, okay? And the r, radians, radius, right? Radians, I'm going to write this. Radians, radians, radius, radius, right? Equivalent to my spelling sucks and you probably can't read that. So what we end up doing is instead of saying move an angle here, we say move a distance here. Okay. That's, I don't think I did. I was going to use it saying, oh, how many slices of pizza we're going to do. That's why I never did Coolio. I got lost in my explanation of what radians are, right? So what is a radian, right? Here, ask yourself this. What is a radian? We'll bring the pizza in there, Coolio. Okay. One radian, okay, because we're trying to change units. We're trying to eliminate one unit, which is degrees and introduce a new unit radians and our definition of one radian. So definition, definition, one radian is equal to moving along the arc length of the circle equivalent to one radius, right? So this distance from here to here, we're going to represent in R. One radian equals moving along arc length one radius. So just imagine this. Let's assume R here. This was equal to five units. Whatever those units might be centimeters, meters, kilometers, inches, millimeters, feet. It doesn't make a difference. If you move along this, if the radius is five units and I ask you to move along the arc length of the circle, the equivalent of five units, that means you've traveled one radian. Okay. Does that make sense? Let's do, I'm going to erase this and we're going to zoom into what we're talking about here. So I'm going to take all of this down. Okay. I'm working with limited space, so I'm trying to piece it together as a puzzle. The playlist we created is definitely more coherent than what we're doing here, but let's do it. It'll make sense once we start talking about it, once we expand on this a little bit, right? So take a look at this. So mathematicians trying to feet inches, pepperoni squares, or the pepperoni chicho. So take a look at this. Let's draw this. So what's your definition of a radian? The definition of a radian is if you travel one radian, it means you've gone to equivalent of the radius, the same length as one radius along the arc length, right? So let's draw another circle. Instead of making a generic unit circle where the radius is one, let's call the radius 10, right? Now if you traveled here 10 units, then what would the angle be here in radians? Right? I want a pizza. You know what will go great with a pizza, Martin? Beer. Beer. One. Right? So if I ask you travel, if you're standing here, travel along this arc length, three radians. Right? How far are you going to go here? Where are you going to be? Beer. 40. Right? So if you're traveling three radians along the arc length, that means you're going to go three more links of the radius along the arc length. So you're already at 10, you're going to go three more, which is 30 more. So I'm going to go, there's one. There's another one. There's another one. Right? So now you're going to be here and you've traveled from there to there is now 40. Right? So what you've done, you've changed the unit of measurement for angle and related to the radius. So you no longer need degrees. Right? Degrees becomes irrelevant. Now how does this play out? Well, check this out. What's the circumference of a circle? So circumference of a circle is 2 pi r. Right? And circumference of a circle means the distance you've gone all the way around the circle. Right? That's what a circumference of a circle is. 2 pi r. Nice. 2 pi r. So I'm going to erase this because the lines throw people off. It looks messy when I look at it on the screen. It looks cleaner when I take it out. Right? 2 pi r. I have some kombucha instead. I hear it's good for, yeah, kombucha would be amazing actually with pizza. Right? Pizza with lots of greens and feta, mushrooms. So circumference of a circle is 2 pi r. Right? That means the distance you travel from here all the way around is this. Right? Now how many degrees do you go when you travel all the way around a circle? It's 360 degrees. Right? Now what does 2 pi r mean when it comes to the radius of a circle? Well, when you're talking radians, the r, if you're measuring this thing in radians, the r is really the radius of this thing. Right? So when you travel around the circle, the distance you're going, the angle you're going around the circle is equivalent to 2 pi. If you travel 2 pi radians around the circle, it means you've gone all the way around the circle once. Right? If you start off here, if you go 2 pi radians, 2 times pi, pi is 3.14, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. So it's 6.28. So there are 6.28, et cetera, radiuses around a circle. Right? So the way you can do conversions is by proportionality, by ratios. What you can do is say 360 degrees is equivalent to 2 pi radians, radians, the units of it. Right? So if you ever need to convert from degrees to radians, the ratio you're going to use is going to be 360 over 2 pi has to be equal, angle in degrees divided by radians. Okay? So let me do a little example here. So for example, let's assume you had a circle. Here's a circle. Here's our coordinate system. Right? Let's assume you were standing here. Oops. Right? It's flying. Right? Theta. Let's assume our angle here, theta was 50 degrees. Right? And we ask ourselves how many radians is that equivalent to? Then your absolute unit conversion, your scale factor, your conversion, here is 360 is equal to 2 pi. 360 degrees is equal to 2 pi radians. Right? Radiuses around a circle. So what you can do is go 360 degrees over 2 pi has to be degrees over radians, which becomes 360 over 2 pi has to be equal 50 degrees over x or r. Now, we're not going to call it r because r would call radius. Right? Let's call this x. x. And then we can just cross multiply. So x is equal to 2 pi times 50 is 100 pi divided by 360. So x is going to be equal to kill 0. 2 goes into this 5 times 2 goes into this 18 times is 5 pi over 18. Right? So the angle here in radians that's equivalent to 50 degrees is 5 pi over 18 radians. I'm sorry if that wasn't fluid enough because I was trying to read the comments and do this at the same time. I actually haven't done this explanation this year yet to my students because they haven't hit it yet. The grade 12s. Right? Actually, I'm just picking up a grade 12 student. Now, for some reason right now my students are younger. But this is basically the flow of what a radian is. Radian is mathematician is us trying to simplify a circle by referencing the angle as a measure relative to the radius as you move around the arc length of a circle. And the relationship you have is 360 degrees is 2 pi radians. Right? So whenever you're trying to do unit conversion, convert from radians to degrees, you just go 360 over 2 pi is equal to degree over radians and you put whatever you want here or here and find the unknown. Okay. It is quite good following the explanation. Yeah, he teaches math and physics for a living. He's great at explaining the concept today. I think I explained this a little rough today. Personally, tell you the truth. But it is. I don't know how many hours have been going on. I didn't know. Three and a half hours almost, I guess. If 360 degrees equals 2 pi, then why is C 2 pi R 2 pi? Because the radius decides for here it was 10. The radius decides what the distance says you're traveling around there. Right? This R here is the radius of the circle. Right? So basically here, let me do a little, I'm going to kill this. Yeah. Let's kill this. Yes. Thank you for the penny really dropped really helpful and easy to understand. I need to weight transfer all the knowledge in your brain and put it in my head. Oh, because R is one. Yeah. Because R. Yeah. Sorry. Because it was a unit circle. Right? R was one uptime has been live for three hours and 18 minutes. Nice. Just plug into the matrix, my dude. Yeah. I had a nice stay though. I want to keep steady and going. Cool. I'll be right back. Yeah. Spiderman, enjoy your little breaks. I keep some parts at the top. Okay. Cool. So it made sense. Yeah. It's pretty cool. Trigonometry I love. And we can graph these things. Take a look at this. Here. Let's graph these. I'm going to take all this down. How was this cyclic? How was this cyclic? Let's do a little graph. Let's draw off our circle. And if this was a unit circle and it was right, or it could be unit circle, right? If the radius is one, let's assume we start off here, right? And we want to move around the circle. Okay. What's the highest level of math you teach? I teach a great 12 mathematics and I gone into university and college just a little bit because some of my students when they go there, they go, oh gee, Joe, can you help us out? And they meet with them and they teach them a little bit and stuff like this. But mainly high school mathematics. I don't go, I don't do calculus. I don't do hardcore stats anymore right now anyway. I hope I wish I was doing it personally, but just haven't had the time to review it. If I'm not teaching it, I'm not using it really aside from the numbers I look at myself. If I'm analyzing something such as the COVID-19 data, coronavirus, 19 data, stuff like this, which hopefully will do a little bit of stats on, but the data is not reliable anymore, which is unfortunate, right? It was, it was looking good, but they changed the way they're measuring the things and they're not, they're running out of kids to analyze things. If you knew any six sigma or statistics, I don't know what six sigma is. The normal distribution, the Z score and stuff like this, sure. When you're talking about the Z score, it's X minus X mean over the standard deviation, which gives you the Z score and you do the normal and the stag graph and the area below number and stuff like this. That stuff is fairly straightforward. The confidence of it, no. I've totally forgotten that stuff. I have to reach and the standard deviation. But I have to look at the formulas and stuff. What were we doing? Oh, yeah, we're going to graph this thing. So you watch this. Let's assume we're going to graph sine theta versus theta. Okay. Can go over Gaussian functions, Gaussian functions. Which ones are Gaussian functions? I don't have to look it up. Okay, I've got to look this up. Gaussian function. Now let's come up. I've got to see the Gaussian function. Man, I used to use these things, but I can't remember because I haven't used them for a gazillion years now. Gaussian function. And nothing, Gaussian function, often simply refer to as Gaussian is a function of the form. Show you the form. Oh yeah, now I haven't used these things forever, man. Sorry. No Gaussian functions. Can't do Gaussian functions. Six six months of branch of probability that business is used for quality control. It's cool because a certification is in it are named like martial arts belts. Oh really? There are six sigma black belts out there. Wow. Six six months of philosophy to bring costs down and bring productivity up. Wow. Wow. No, I've never dealt with it. Normal distribution, I think. It's also, oh, Gaussian is normal as well. Is that it? The function looked different. Let me do image search. Oh yes, normal distribution. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. To give me the function was different. Gaussian, that is a normal distribution. Because standard deviation, the mean, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I would have to look up the formulas, man. I haven't been using the Gaussian formula. We just used the, yeah, the point minus the mean about a standard deviation. I would, yeah, yeah, I would have to do some serious review to be able to do that, brother. I'm sorry. Or sister, of course. Yeah, really said it. Sorry. So you say, how do I control? Ciclic rate for machine guns. Is this related? Possibly. I don't know. I don't know machine guns. Martin, are you hitting the bureau already? There's even a step above black belt called Gossas. Two names for the same thing, basically. Two names for the same thing. Yeah, it looks like it. Okay, I'm sorry. I wish I could. I wish I could have helped you out. The normal distribution, we can do the basics of it, right? So for example, here, let me just graph this. Just show you this and we'll do one normal distribution, trying to figure out what it is. We'll need the table as well. I'll dig that up. But just imagine this. If this is a unit circle, the radius is one. And we talked about this, where y is equal to sine theta, right? Basically, what that means is the y-axis, where you are on the y-coordinate is sine theta, right? That's why we're going to graph sine theta versus theta. And this is your theta right here. Now, theta, you can measure in radians or you can measure in degrees. Chicho, do you know how to dance? Yes. I think everybody knows how to dance, right? Chicho, please, this is our, all I can hear is the word be, I'm sorry, Martin. No, no, no, no, no, no. Think here, think. Apple. Here, let me give my hand a little wipe. Apple and peanut butter. Really. I'll pop this. So take a look at this. All right. Last graph, y sine theta as we move from here all the way around one cycle. Okay. Now, if you're moving one cycle, one circle, once around the circle, you're moving 360 degrees, right? 360 degrees, which is also equivalent to two pi radians, right? Isn't it helping? I drink, oh yeah, that's right. You drink cider. Sorry, brother. It's also two pi, right? So what we're going to do is we're going to take a look at each of these nodes, where we are at each location. So we're going to break this thing down into four quadrants, right? This is 180 degrees, which is pi. This is 90 degrees, which is pi over two. This is 270 degrees, which is three pi over two. What? Pi over two is 90 degrees. Might as well drink some whiskey then to stop the beer cranks. So take a look at this. If you're here, what's your coordinate here? If you're in a unit circle, the radius is one. The coordinate here is one and zero. And if we're graphing our Y position, because what's happening is, if you stand here, right, your Y position is here. And as you move up, your Y goes up, maxes out here, and then comes back down, and then goes down, and then goes up, and then goes up. So as you move around the circle, your Y position is doing this, right? And if you're going to graph this, take a look at this. At this point, you're at one and zero. You're here. So your Y coordinate, this is your Y, you're at zero. When you go up here, because your radius is one, this is zero and one. So you go to one at 90 degrees, because that's 90 degrees. Your Y is one, so you're here. If you go over here, your position here is negative one and zero. So if you're 180 degrees, your Y value is zero. You're back down here. When you come to here, your position here is zero and negative one. So at 270 degrees, you're at zero and negative one. And then when you come back here, you're at zero again. So the graph of you moving around the circle, your Y position looks like this. And then this continues to repeat, because you go around the circle, around the circle, around the circle. What moves like this? The tides of the ocean move like this. Sound waves move like this. Light moves like this, right? Why are circles important? Because what we see, what we hear, what we experience in this world follows a cyclic nature, right? It's very cyclic. I'm going to ban. Did we ban? Well, I know how to get to sleep easy enough. Just watch you talk about, yeah, that's right, ASMR, brother. But let's do this, time out. Be nice. Right? So it follows that. It's as simple as that. Circle represents a perfect cyclic function. And as you move around the circle, you get a graph like this. And this occurs in nature everywhere. That's why we study circles, really, right? Trigonometry. Let's talk about, well, by the way, the cost function, as you move around the x-axis on the, as you move around the circle, the x-graph looks like this starts at one because you're here. One goes to negative one. And it's just what it is. It's just shifted 90 degrees because if you take a circle, rotate it like this, it's just like moving this guy over. Right? No worries, Martin. He came here to an ASMR stream and said he was, he was falling asleep, which is actually what is supposed to be about a certain degree, right? And he wasn't too happy about it, I guess. A product of our centralized education system. Right? Hilarious. It's like signing up to go to do exercise. And then when you go to exercise, you say, I don't like it because I'm exercising. What? I don't see how the phrasing could be taken. Everything's sinusoidal in the end. Everything's sinusoidal at the end. Check this out. Should we do just a stat question? Speedy Gonzales stat? Let's do a stat question, Speedy Gonzales stat. So we needed the normal distribution table, right? So let's check this out. Yeah, let's just do random. I'll make one up. Take a look at this. Let's assume we have some kind of database that follows the normal distribution, right? Trigonometry is actually used on a lot of everyday riddles, like guessing the height of a building based on the angle and the distance between you and the bill. Yeah, for sure. What's your personal favorite type of math, either to teach or just to do? I like talking about functions. I love functions, right? Which kicks you into calculus, but calculus, I'm not there yet, right? And I like data analysis, statistics, really. I like crunching numbers. I like seeing patterns. I like graphing things and trending, right? Following the trends. But let's assume we have a normal distribution. Here's a normal distribution, right? And any data set that fits this, whoop, is called a normal distribution, right? Or Gaussian people mentioned, right? Now what this is, let's assume this point here is, I'm not going to use variables, we're just going to use numbers straight up. Let's assume the middle point here, the mean of the thing is 15, okay? If this thing follows a normal distribution or data set follows a normal distribution, then what it means is, if you move one standard deviation away from here, okay? And let's assume the standard deviation, the distance here to this and standard deviation, you do a calculation. We're not going to go over the formula for this, right? Let's assume the distance from there to there. Let's make this, here, let me make this a little neater, right? Let's assume here, this is three less than this, so make this 12 and three more than this, make this 18, right? And then let's go one more standard deviation down. Let's make this a nine and let's make this 21, 21, okay? The normal distribution says this, if you go for this data set anyway, if you go one standard deviation away from the mean, one unit away from the mean, standard deviation away from the mean, then this data in here, 68%, I think 68%, 68% of your data fits in here. If you go two standard deviations away, so from here to here is six, from here to here is six units, then this data, all of this contains like 95% of your data, right? Okay, I've seen a math method to multiply today. Okay, we're gonna skip that. Does he see this? This chat, I do see the chat, but once I go off on a math thing, I don't read the chat that much because it throws me off a little bit. Let's start the read one. Let me read this one. Saying you first calculate two times five times 10, then 12 plus 5, 17, so 70 plus 10 is 180 solution, but how about if you do with example, oh wow, I don't consider myself a human calculator, so I don't try to do calculate multiplications like this. I go old school, right? And it's at an angle quite well, but it's been decades since I was in school. Wait, so is any amount of units under the curve referred to a standard deviation? Yeah, if the standard deviation, let me bring out the exact value. So we're talking about the right numbers, right? Normal distribution. So yeah, so within here, let me draw this. Within one standard deviation of the data, within here, this contains 68.26% of the data, 68.26% of the data is in there. Within two standard deviations, right? It contains 95.44% of the data, 95.44% of the data. Three standard deviations away contains 99.72% of the data, right? Three standard deviations. We're missing it here, but whatever. We're over there. So three standard deviations away contains 99.72% of the data, right? And the standard deviation varies depending on your data set, depending on the form of the normal distribution. So for example, you could have a normal distribution that looks like this, right? Or a normal distribution that looks like this, right? And if the mean here could be the same, could be 15. And the mean here could be 15, right? But if your data set is varies, then one standard deviation here that contains one standard deviation means 68.26% of your data is within that zone, right? This could be 10 and 20. So the standard deviation is 5. Or if it's thin and long, this could be 16. And this could be 14. And the standard deviation would be 1, right? It really depends on your data set. For me, I just pick 3. Let's assume our data set, the standard deviation for our data set is 3. That means 3 units away from the mean contains 68.26% of the data, right? Oh, standard deviation is also called a quadratic mean, is it? I didn't know that. And I know we're not going into detail on integrals this stream. But if memory serves, integrals describe the area of the curve. Yeah, integrals, it's basically you're taking the area of the thing, right? The standard deviation tells you how much big the variation is in your data around the mean, yeah. And the variation is really your, right? So let's assume this. Let's assume there's tables for this. This is set in stone. You're basically standardizing your data set to the normal distribution. You're fitting your data set to the normal distribution, right? You're saying, oh, it follows a normal distribution. So all the things, all the parameters we know about a data set that fits like this applies to this data set, right? From one instant, the square root of the variance, but I might be, yeah, the square root is square root of the standard deviation, isn't it? Or is the standard deviation squared? I got to look these up. Same for the big number sort, yeah. This is correct, but never heard of the term quadratic mean. I've heard of quadratic mean, but I don't know the term, oh, no, no, the standard deviation is called a quadratic mean. No, I've never heard the standard deviation being referred to as a quadratic mean, right? And there's a whole bunch of formulas for these things, right? But one of the formulas we have, which is a simple formula is a Z table. Let me grab Z table normal. Let's bring out the Z table. There we go. You want something that's bigger? Here, let me see if this one's legit. Yeah, here. I'll give you guys a link in the description and the chat. So you guys see it. So here's a Z table, right? Cumulative distribution continuum. And this is the one that I've basically used. And the Z table basically does this. They draw you a table, right? And the formula for the Z table is, the formula is this, I believe. Z is equal to a point minus the mean divided by the standard deviation. Correct me if I'm wrong on this. Is this correct? Should be. I'm back. Spider-Man, how's it going? Z table, Z formula. Table formula. Formula normal point. Yeah, that's what it is. Okay, cool. We're not that far off then, right? So let's assume you have a point that you want to analyze in this data. So the question would be, what's the probability of, let me say this correctly. Oh yeah, let's assume the question is this. Yeah, it does not translate in English. Quadratic mean would mean, statistics, man. I wasn't going to say, but I live in a pub. I can hear them. You live downstairs. Oh my god. Oh no, Martin, that's crazy. You need to move away from this, but it's easy work, right? Travel to work is like going downstairs. That's the average standard. Square differences for the mean more like, I didn't realize you live upstairs. Oh man, you probably don't leave that building for days upon days. I'm a ZZ guy personally because Z, I like my alphabetic rhyme. That's like a smoker. And the interaction with people is amazing, right? If it's a good group of people you have, the conversations and the marrying meant is fantastic, right? But don't go down there, Martin. It's like a smoker looking at it. So let's assume the question was this. This is our data set. This is what we know of the whole data set. It's my pub. I run everything. Oh, do you Martin? Oh man, fun. Oh, I'm so glad I'm not there. I'm not in the UK. I'd be coming there and I would be live streaming on the bar. I'm playing pool. I hope you got a pool table there and probably darts as well, right? So let's assume we have this data set. This is the model of the whole, that must be something, that this is the data for the whole population, right? Or the sample, right? I have an asset manager and a few team leaders and many bar staff, yeah. Oh gosh, can we have a Chico fan meet up at Martin's pub one day? Maybe. It would be fun. Put the stream on the TV in the pub. Oh my God. They'd be like, oh the one, what the hell? Unless I do something drinking related games and whatnot. We could definitely do that, right? So check this out. What if you analyzed another sample from the population? You got some data, right? And they want to find out this. What's the probability? This would be the type of question you would get. What's the probability? What's the probability that, oops, that your data will be between, let's say, 14 and 20, right? So what's the probability that your data, if you're pulling at a random, will be between 14 and 20? So let me ask you this. What's the probability that your data will be between 12 and 18, right? Well, your probability is 68%, right? Because that's what it is. 12 is here, 18 is here, and it's 68% probability that your data set is within that zone. So you're within that zone. Right now the question is, what's the probability that your data set will be between 14 and 20? So 14 is here, right? And 20 is here, right? So what we're really asking ourselves is, let me do this in green, so maybe it'll come up there. Hopefully this green comes out better. That's not bad. 14 and 20. So we're asking ourselves, what's the probability that your data set is within this zone? Well, the probability, you have to find your z value for 14 and 20, and then you look it up on the table and you just read it off the graph, off the table, right? So let's figure out what the z number is for 14. The z, oh no, standard deviation, we know. The z number is going to be 14 minus the mean, which is 15, divided by 3. 14 minus 15 is negative 1, so it's negative a third, which is negative 0.33, repeating, right? The z value for 20 is going to be 20 minus 15 over 3, which is going to be 5 over 3. 3 goes into 5 once and you got 2 over 3, which is 1.66, repeating, right? One thing you should notice, oh yeah, this should be negative, oh yeah, it is negative. One thing you'll notice is numbers on this side of the normal distribution are going to be negative, the z value are going to be negative. The numbers on this side of the normal distribution, the z numbers are going to be positive, okay? Chichoyans are welcome to visit. Nice. All Chichoyans are welcome to visit. Awesome. All the pub goers would get math and physics lessons and be the smartest drunkards in the world. Drunk math. Chichoy drunk. That would be a sight to see. It is a sight to see. I have seven pool tables. Dude, no way. Are you serious, Martin? Oh, the pool shark and me just craving it. I used to spend hours upon hours in pubs, playing pool and drinking for free, right? Seriously. You guys play a nine ball, eight ball or snooker? We were, for us by the way, we used to play lots of eight ball and lots of nine ball. Nine ball is fantastic. It's a sports bar. It's a sports bar. Chichoy fans need up one day. It needs to happen. Maybe we do someday. Maybe we do someday, right? So these are the two numbers we have, right? Negative 0.333 and 1.66. So if we look at the table, check this out. Oh, did I lose the table? No, I didn't lose the table. Nice. Where is the table? There it is. So what you do right now is you go, okay, what's the Z value? Oh, they've done it with the zero. Yeah, negative 3. Wait a second. Oh, this is only part of it. We need the other one. Where is the Z table? I need the table. We need both sides. There is it. We need the negative numbers as well. So sorry, gang. I didn't send you the negative number ones. Oh, and this table doesn't include the whole thing, does it? Oh, it doesn't hold these silly picks. Where is the table? We want the whole thing. No. Well, we don't need the negatives. We're going to just drive it, but I'd rather get you the negative tables as well. That way it's easy done. Oh, we don't want that. Yeah, we could do that. Let's see. There we go. There's the negative ones. Oh, my God. Access denied. What is this? Access denied. I really dislike these. There we go. Oh, I can't even read that. That's too small. Can I make it bigger? That's too small. We need the bigger one. Where is the bigger one? It's so difficult. I should have a Z thing handy. Okay, we're going to go to a different search. We don't want that. I'm going to bring it here. Sorry, gang. It's taking a little bit of time. I didn't have the normal distribution ready. I should actually... What do you call that? There we go. Oh, come on. Is this access? What is up with these people? Man, I swear on the internet it was a lot easier trying to find things in the past. There we go. Oh, difficult, difficult. Here. Here's a normal distribution. Got five people in my room, but eight left. No, that's great. That's another thing. That's great. Got five people in my room, but eight left it. How much people entered to enter it till it's empty? So, lines. Each popular group. Oh, what is it? What is it? Mostly American pool tables. Cool. Nine ball, mostly nice. Nine ball is the best pool in a bar if it's a line cleaning. Yes, but in order to be that good. So, take a look at this table. What you do, we want to find and the way it works is this. I'm going to erase... Okay, we already figured out the Z score. So, we're just going to write down the Z score. So, Z score in the bottom part associated with 14 is negative 0.33 repeating. Associated with 20 is 1.66 repeating, right? So, let me kill this. Let me draw you how you can use the Z table, right? And the Z tables, usually, they're set up like this. What they have is this. 90% is 0.96. So, Z table is usually this. The number that they give you in the percentage, right? They usually have this. This is 0. That's the mean. And these are the numbers you're looking at. They're negative on this side and positive on this side. And when you read a number, it's giving you the area in the table on this side of it, right? So, for us, negative 0.33, if you look at the table, the number you're getting is negative 0.33 is 0.3707. So, the number associated with this is, and that's a percentage. So, it's 37.07% of the data of this data is on this side of the graph, right? And the number associated with this, if that's going to be here, it's going to be a lot larger because there's a lot of data on this side, right? So, we want to go to 1.66. 1.66 is 95.15%. So, 95.15% of the data is over here on this side, right? So, let me do a little erasing here. Now that we know how to read the table, so all you have to do now is to find out what percent of the data is within this zone, right? Between 14 and 20, you subtract this from this. So, 95.15 minus 37.07, 8.1, 8.15, 8.5. 58% of the data or 58% probability that you're going to lie anywhere between 18 and 20. That's what percent of the data is in there, okay? That's one of the most basic questions, or I don't know if it's basic. There's a little bit of probability you learned before. That's actually some places a fair bit, but in high school, in my part of the world, this is sort of where they take you or they used to take you when they were teaching you probability, okay? 60% of the time it works every time. It's pretty cool. This normal distribution stuff is fantastic. Very cool stuff, right? Very useful, very useful. Man, we're going hardcore. Four hours, right on. This is the longest mastering we've done, right? Uptime. And my mind is a little mush after four hours of going out this, right? Three hours and 55 minutes. Martin, what are you going to do? I hope you don't go down. Well, let me rephrase that. Let me put that in the right way. Sometimes it's good to go down, but I hope you don't go downstairs. What do you think is Assange's favorite math in keeping with the thing? Assange is, Assange's favorite math, he likes stats. He likes data. He's not, I don't think he's into calculus. He's not into functions. He's into mass data processing. That's my, like basically writing programs, codes, and filtering out data, running filters through data, extracting out. So I think statistics is what Assange would be more into. Thanks for the experience. My pleasure. Hopefully we're limited on the board, usually. And I'm sort of towards the end of a four hour or so. I'm a little mushy. What an incredible stream. Awesome, Spider-Man. I'm glad you liked it. It was fun. Yeah, good stream. Is anyone into calculus? For sure. Apart from Newton. Yeah, a lot of business is calculus. There's a lot of business in calculus and engineering, of course, too. I got to mod for the first time. Woo-hoo. That's fun. Nice. Awesome. I hope it didn't keep you too busy. We didn't have too many trolls coming, so that was a good thing. Right? Line cleaning with math. Two beers clean. Done each time. Seven pint lines. Six pumps. That's 42 pints when it's done today. What's going on here? I became a software developer, but I wonder if I should try becoming a data analyst. But it's a lot of knowledge to get. Yeah. Yeah. What do you call it? Software developer is fine, but you can have interfaces to bring the data in and interpret the data. You don't have to become hardcore data analysts. You just have to be able to provide visuals and interpret the data. As a controls engineer, as I can tell you, we have never used calculus yet. Computers do everything now. Someone's got to write the code, right? They're using macros and stuff, no? Clinical pharmacist. Nice. It's kind of a sad how much we rely on technology. Yeah. And the unfortunate part is there's a lot of bad code written, isn't there? Data science is the future. Pays well. Yeah. Interpreting data. Like, look at Facebook, Google, YouTube. All technology companies are all data. They're just data and analysis machines, right? I like to strike a balance of knowing a lot of stuff personally and letting computers pick up the slack on their... Yeah, for sure. Python has really good libraries for data analysis and displaying data, does it? Oh, man, I got to learn Python. Riot has been pushing me to learn Python. I wish I had the... I'll be careful what you wish for. At some point, I will, once I free up a little bit of time. I'm a software engineer. I mess with lots of data as well. Yeah. I work at Arsalanol. They build steel and big data is a big deal here. Those who know how to do stuff get a lot of money. Yeah. I don't think relying on the computer for the crunching just got to know when it's spitting out the wrong answer. Yeah. Agreed. You have to have a very good intuitive feel of your data. And the only way you acquire that intuitive feel is if you spend a lot of time with the data, right? So when it comes to data analysis, the people with more experience tend to be... Which isn't really the case, you can say, with all disciplines. But if you spend a lot of time in a field and analyzing that type of data, you get a good feel of the flow of things, right? Yes. I guess I didn't realize the macros and stuff we use rely on Calc. Yeah. I have a lot of notes on Python if you want. Oh, cool. I don't have the time to learn. The first thing I have to relearn is more of the stats, hard core stats that I used to know and calculus. After that, once we've covered all that, I'm going to jump into programming, man. Python really nice and easy to begin language. Nice. I know I'm not too great at it yet, personally. Wait, no one is coming to my line cleaning. I don't even know what this line cleaning is. Is this laying out the alcohol and taking it all down? That's a serious businessman. Fun. Anyway, gang, should we call the stream a couple of hours? I didn't even drink too much liquids or anything, but I'm definitely going to go for a walk now. If you teach data analysis, I'll definitely come to watch. Nice. I will at some point. I really want to. I love data analysis. Thanks, Ali. I try my best. I try my best, right? In regards to teaching. Whichever teacher or stream it is, it will be. Thanks for the love, Spider-Man. And we've got the best mods in here. But what is that you're doing? This is just straight up tea. It's cold tea now. It's just cold tea. I like cold tea as well. Tea is my to-go-to thing. We clean beer lines, but first we disconnect and clean, clean lyes. Then drink it. If that's what I think it means. 42 pints? No, man. The dream Akulio says no. Okay gang. Thank you for being here. Thank you for the conversations. Thank you for the math questions. Thank you for the discussions. Thank you for the input mods. Thank you for taking care of business. Thank you for the subs. Thank you for the follows. Okay. Thank you for just participating. It was a lot of fun. If you can make it tomorrow from, I believe from 1 to 2 p.m. 1 to 3 p.m. my time, we're going to do a Julien Assange stream. Stream tomorrow is on Assange completely right. 100%. We're just going to talk about it. I'm going to try to catch up on the news a little bit because news is unfolding pretty fast, but we'll just do a live stream and talk about what's going on and where it can lead to. And any new developments that come up. And most likely next week or within a couple of weeks, once the trial goes into full effect, we'll keep on taking a look at it and see where it goes. I'll be their awesome Spider-Man. Okay gang, I hope you guys have a fantastic, fantastic day. It's done monthly. It's done monthly. Wow, wow, wow. Thanks for the stream. I wish I had you for my teacher in high school. You're probably a major in math otherwise. Would have probably major in math otherwise. Thank you for the love, man. Incredible. Thanks so much. My pleasure. See you then, hopefully, if I get to do this. Awesome. Awesome. And I'll see you guys on Discord if you guys have the Discord going. Thanks for popping or sticking around throughout the whole stream, Spider-Man and Martin. Martin, no beer today. Well, I can't say. If I was in your shoes, I don't know what I would do, man. I hope you enjoy your evening though. Okay. Bye, everyone. And I'll see you guys tomorrow. Don't forget to check the gaming folder on Discord. Okay, for sure. I will, Kulio. How can there be more chess variations than electrons in yours? Exponential growth. Mathematics. Fun. Aww. Bye, everyone.