Fellow fedizens!
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@SmartmanApps @LucasWerkmeister my friend, let me introduce you to 1/3
@sandyarmstrong @LucasWerkmeister
"my friend" - your friend is a Maths teacher. Again, here is a whole thread written about it, including Maths textbooks
https://dotnet.social/@SmartmanApps/115207044364101854 -
@sandyarmstrong @LucasWerkmeister
"my friend" - your friend is a Maths teacher. Again, here is a whole thread written about it, including Maths textbooks
https://dotnet.social/@SmartmanApps/115207044364101854@SmartmanApps @LucasWerkmeister skimming... "1/3 and 0.(3) AREN'T the same number". It looks to me like we aren't going to make any further progress in this conversation.
Have a great day! -
@SmartmanApps @LucasWerkmeister skimming... "1/3 and 0.(3) AREN'T the same number". It looks to me like we aren't going to make any further progress in this conversation.
Have a great day!@sandyarmstrong @LucasWerkmeister
"skimming" - not learning"It looks to me like we aren't going to make any further progress in this conversation" - you can't contradict centuries of proven Maths, no. You can choose to learn about it or not (in fact it would've been taught to you already in high school, as proven by the Maths textbooks).
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@sandyarmstrong @LucasWerkmeister
"skimming" - not learning"It looks to me like we aren't going to make any further progress in this conversation" - you can't contradict centuries of proven Maths, no. You can choose to learn about it or not (in fact it would've been taught to you already in high school, as proven by the Maths textbooks).
@sandyarmstrong @LucasWerkmeister
P.S. ""1/3 and 0.(3) AREN'T the same number" - go read the part of my thread about Base number systems, and you'll discover why it's literally impossible to represent 1/3 exactly in Base 10. We can represent it exactly in Base 3 - 0.1 - but not in Base 10, which is precisely why it's infinitely recurring. All infinitely recurring numbers are only approximations, hence why we use limits as a substitute for them when we need to do arithmetic with them. -
@Raccoon @LucasWerkmeister my spouse refuses to believe that peanut butter was invented by John Harvey Kellogg and not George Washington Carver.
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Fellow fedizens! As decreed by https://xkcd.com/843/ some fifteen years ago, it is once again time to spend the morning reading through the Wikipedia article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_common_misconceptions.
@LucasWerkmeister Oh dog, now it's a list of lists

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@LucasWerkmeister
Lemmings do not engage in mass suicidal dives off cliffs when migrating.
"The lemmings in the film were actually purchased from Inuit children, transported to the filming location in Canada and repeatedly shoved off a nearby cliff by the filmmakers to create the illusion of a mass suicide."
#wtf@jerzone @LucasWerkmeister This can‘t be right, I specifically recall lots of lemmings falling to their death in my childhood. Woth their green hair and blue body, they were so adorable…!
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Fellow fedizens! As decreed by https://xkcd.com/843/ some fifteen years ago, it is once again time to spend the morning reading through the Wikipedia article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_common_misconceptions.
@LucasWerkmeister we did actually read a bunch of it yesterday. it was a good read.
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@LucasWerkmeister we did actually read a bunch of it yesterday. it was a good read.
@LucasWerkmeister anyway this is very much a tradition we're in favor of Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius-ing
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be that as it may, this year I learned:
• Michelangelo was standing, not lying down, while painting the Sistine Chapel ceiling (I probably read this before but had partially forgotten it again)
• the electrocution of Topsy the Elephant was not an anti-alternating current demonstration organized by Thomas A. Edison during the war of the currents
• the dodo’s intelligence was above average for an avian, and also its meat was inedible
@LucasWerkmeister For me, the one thing that stood out most is that mice prefer to eat sweet sugary things over cheese.
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A anderslund@expressional.social shared this topic