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Quote from: LeeE on 12/09/2010 14:43:21Yes, good old Pythagoras, but I don't follow that generalisation. This seems like an odd and unwarranted way to treat time.That minus sign is what makes SR and GR work and gives them a geometrical interpretation. If you choose not to follow it, I don't think you'll get the physics of relativity to work out...
Yes, good old Pythagoras, but I don't follow that generalisation. This seems like an odd and unwarranted way to treat time.
That response was of no help whatsoever, as well as being offensive.
Quote from: yor_on on 13/09/2010 04:30:28Could be wrong though, happened before, and will happen again Don't worry about it Yor_on. I used to make mistakes too.
Could be wrong though, happened before, and will happen again
Quote from: Geezer on 13/09/2010 04:33:33Quote from: yor_on on 13/09/2010 04:30:28Could be wrong though, happened before, and will happen again Don't worry about it Yor_on. I used to make mistakes too.Quote from: Geezer on 13/09/2010 04:33:33Quote from: yor_on on 13/09/2010 04:30:28Could be wrong though, happened before, and will happen again Don't worry about it Yor_on. I used to make mistakes too. Geezer, I believe that you that you thought you had made a mistake once but found out later that you had not. Thanks for comments. Joe L. Ogan
Not as I can see? There seems to be different possibilities for how to describe it mathematically? But you really need to give some examples to how you think kenhikage so that we uninitiated see what you mean, why it have to be a sine curve in 2D and possibly a wave sheet in 3D? Wave-sheet btw? What would that look like?
Everything can be described by vibrations of strings in multiple dimensions (String Teory). It is just a matter of perception and how far you can go with it...
Nope, it's not a sine wave. A sine wave would be a single point as you say, in a orbit. What you do here is to define one point of a ring as that 'single' object me thinks. And then you are correct. But as I see it there is no single isolated point existing there, more than in my imagination as I define it so. A closed ring of matter is closed, no matter how you fold it, as I believe. So to make it a sine seems to me truly hard. what you could do is to pick in the time aspect as just another 'material' dimension and then 'displace' the object in time, but it would still be a 'whole object', well, to me it would