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Wasn't that good at math in school

Name: Anonymous 2010-04-24 6:08

Is there any chance of me getting into quantum physics? I'm interesting in what makes up the universe, but...

Name: Anonymous 2010-04-24 7:23

To get the basics of QM down you really just need linear algebra.

Unless you are completely retarded, which you probably are not, you can probably make some good progress if you put the work into it.

Name: Anonymous 2010-04-24 17:43

>>2
>To get the basics of QM down you really just need linear algebra.
..and competency in calculus.

Name: Anonymous 2010-04-27 1:33

Maybe you should study philosophy. The Greeks managed to find atoms and a lot of "modern" stuff with hard thinking and analogies. Quantum physics will go -way- beyond school mathematics. I mean I am an mechanical engineer and the university math isn't that easy (and is beyond school math) and I am hearing all the time "that of course is a simplistic explanation of the actual math" from my math professors...

Name: Anonymous 2010-04-27 9:28

>>4
Why not just apply for starbucks now and save 4 years of lost income?

Name: Anonymous 2010-04-27 17:55

>>5
You know, it is possible to study independently, just for shits and giggles.

Name: Anonymous 2010-04-27 19:36

>>3

I don't think you need much calculus to get a grasp on the Dirac formalism of QT.

Name: Anonymous 2010-04-29 16:33

There are a lot of autodidacts in the world. Get serious as fuck about MATH CLUB or something. That's mostly free, maybe not the most efficient method, but combined efforts can take you further than individual ones in a lot of cases.

Name: Hinduese 2010-05-01 1:02

>>4
>Greeks
Hindu philosophers originated the theory of atomism! Thank you!

Name: Anonymous 2010-05-01 18:58

>>4
The Greeks pulled atomism out of their ass, along with a whole bunch of crap, including infinite divisibility. Their abhorrence of empiricism led to a scatter-shot approach to philosophy, and it's only through the sheerest luck that some of it turned out to have some vague bearing on reality.

>>9
They came up with it independently, but they didn't influence the Greeks, and if atomism had any bearing on modern (which is to say, Western) philosophy, it came from the Greeks, not the Hindus.

Name: Anonymous 2010-05-03 0:04

>...and it's only through the sheerest luck that some of it turned out to have some vague bearing on reality.
That seems a little harsh. If you're just talking about atomism and not all Greek philosophy you're probably right though.

Name: Anonymous 2010-05-09 17:35

I doubt all of what you said is valid.

I've heard of Liberals who hate that we're still fighting a war in the oily East but little of Conservatives who do more than angst the fact.  Instead, they're rather angry the White House is trying to force/delude with an arbitrary pull-out date that they keep moving around.  Additionally, criticism of President Obama has been about his non-military international efforts and his domestic program, not his "overseas contingency" conduct; has Limbaugh called him a war criminal yet (has he?  I don't listen to the guy but I know if there's something radical to say he'd be the one to willingly say it whether or not other people believed it)?

As for the effort to now expand oil drilling, this is nothing new.  There has been some desire to push for expanding energy such as domestic oil drilling and nuclear construction for a number of years now, often little reported.  In fact, a lot of territory off the coast of California is already well-documented and mapped and Shell or ExxonMobil could get working on an unobtrusive method of oil extraction within a month were they allowed to tomorrow.  Those who push for the expansions now probably are using the war to try and tug heart strings - after-all, who wouldn't want to make it less likely we'd stay entangled there for the wrong reasons? - but is more a reaction to what is seen as an unrealistic Green national energy plan.

http://www.digitalnasties.com/shop/theres-always-wednesday-p-12.html

Why?

One word: Immigration.

Since 1970, America's largest source of immigrants has been Latin America, especially Mexico. More than half of these Latino immigrants lack a high school diploma.

Compare the U.S. experience with Canada's. More than half of all immigrants to Canada possess a university degree. Half of all Canada's Ph.D.s are foreign-born.

Why does America choose poorly educated immigrants? The short answer: America does not choose them. They choose themselves.

In the last decade, half of all the immigrants to the United States arrived illegally. Even many of the legal arrivals gained entry courtesy of relatives who originally slipped into the country against the law, then somehow regularized themselves.

By contrast, Canada (a country of 1/10 the U.S. population that takes proportionately many more immigrants than the United States) allows almost no illegal immigration.

The result: While immigration has enhanced the average skill level of the Canadian population, it has detracted from the average skill level of the U.S. population.

Many Americans carry in their minds a family memory of upward mobility, from great-grandpa stepping off the boat at Ellis Island to a present generation of professionals and technology workers. This story no longer holds true for the largest single U.S. immigrant group, Mexican-Americans.

Stephen Trejo and Jeffrey Groger studied the intergenerational progress of Mexican-American immigrants in their scholarly work, "Falling Behind or Moving Up?"

They discovered that third-generation Mexican-Americans were no more likely to finish high school than second-generation Mexican-Americans. Fourth-generation Mexican-Americans did no better than third.

Name: Anonymous 2010-05-10 10:27

>>11
If anything, it isn't harsh enough. This brain-dead worshiping of Greek philosophers is unscientific and ultimately destructive.

Name: Anonymous 2010-05-10 16:29

What about Hero of Alexandria?

Don't change these.
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