🗑️ 🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 17:14:39 UTC No. 16462361
Do you think, twenty years from now, when the great transsexual experiment is over and millions have committed suicide in pursuit of a delusion, do you think all the scientists and doctors who tried to normalize it will cop to their mistake, or will it be more like lobotomization where the experts all went "whoops, we turned millions of people into vegetables, but it was the style at the time"
🗑️ 🧵 Objective Answers Please
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 16:45:01 UTC No. 16462324
Who is producing all of this black male-white female stock imagery and video? There is a massive overrepresentation of it.
So can anyone give a scientific answer? You should be good at determining the cause of patterns.
I would ask /pol/ but they just tell me it's jews without giving me any sources or peer reviewed studies. Chuds.
🗑️ 🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 16:12:08 UTC No. 16462265
What is the correlation between inceldom, mental illness, intelligence, kindness and attractiveness?
🧵 Science Conference
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 15:51:56 UTC No. 16462248
What are your shticks at conferences?
Mine are bringing 3 posters and never attending any and trimming my pubes full of hope on the day before departure.
🧵 Gifted Education Is Fundamentally Flawed
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 15:38:16 UTC No. 16462230
Some kids are more intelligent than others. Not everyone has the same IQ. If you don't recognize this, you're either psychotic or retarded.
Anyway, you could have a kid with a legitimate 145 IQ in let's say 3rd grade, and it would be possible for the teachers to not recognize that he's clearly gifted. Remember that the average elementary school teacher isn't that bright to begin with. Some of them don't know that Georgia is a country. Some high school teachers don't even know what proper English punctuation looks like. Teachers aren't that smart. This kid could be averaging 97 on all the tests, getting scores of between 95 and 100 on nearly every exam, but this kid could still easily fail some classes because he just refuses to do any of the homework. The homework would take him between 1 to 2 hours to complete every day, and he doesn't want to waste his time on stupid bullshit. This kid could know how to build a computer from spare parts, understanding everything about compatibility and bottlenecks, even knowing a bit of real programming at the age of 8, and be particularly articulate when speaking for his age, and the teachers would still think he's dumb because his grades aren't that high.
Also, for the tests, his test average might not actually be that high. It's common in elementary school for teachers to take off points if you don't show your work, and a genius kid in third grade could potentially be stubborn and simply refuse to show his work, but this doesn't mean he's not a genius kid who should be in much more advanced classes.
The solution to this would be to have all the students take a special test to see their academic level and intelligence, and if they score particularly high, they should be placed in gifted classes, regardless of what their grades are.
🧵 /sfg/ - Spaceflight General
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 15:06:47 UTC No. 16462178
Sleeping quarters - edition
previous >>16460080
🧵 Breakthrough in clean energy generation: The hydro-gravitational generator
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 14:30:36 UTC No. 16462130
I'm talking about this device: https://youtu.be/T6fK8EcFizI
The video gives you 2 explanations of how and why it works, let me give you a third one:
Let's think about the asymmetrical tube. The wide part holds 10 liters of water, while the thin part holds only 1 liter, and it was already manually filled with water before we start.
So, what happens to the water inside the asymmetrical tube?
There are only four outcomes that are even theoretically possible:
1- The water splits in two. The water inside the wide part falls into the higher container, while the water inside the thin part falls into the lower container.
2- The water doesn't move at all.
3- The whole of the water moves up the wide part, down the thin part, and into the lower container.
4- The whole of the water moves up the thin part, down the wide part and into the higher container (i.e., what is shown in the video, which creates a perpetual motion machine).
Thing is, options 1, 2, and 3 are physically impossible.
Option 1 would cause a vacuum at the top of the tube, but none of the forces are strong enough to create a vacuum.
Options 2 and 3 cannot happen because the whole point of the asymmetry of the tube is to ensure that the force produced by the 10 liters of water in the wide side is by far the strongest force in the whole system. No force produced in the thin side is anywhere near strong enough to oppose the 10 liters in the wide side.
By design, we can ensure that nothing can prevent the water in the wide part from moving downwards.
Imagine a balance scale with 10kg on one side and 1kg on the other. The only possible outcome is that the 10kg are moving down. It is simply impossible for the 1kg to prevent the scale from moving, let alone to overpower the 10kg, and cause those 10kg to move upwards.
So option 4, the one where we get free electricity, is the only possible one.
🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 14:02:27 UTC No. 16462099
Is it actually possible for someone with a top 1% / 0.5% IQ (or any non-meme index) to learn all of the math required for applied math / actual applications in a lifetime? What percentage of the math with know is exactly "pure"?
🗑️ 🧵 Honestly
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 13:58:21 UTC No. 16462097
there's no counterargument to this
🧵 Everything that happened, is happening, and will happen, are inevitable.
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 13:31:48 UTC No. 16462076
Before the universe existed, there was only the fluctuation between nothingness and something, but all of a sudden, those fluctuations triggered violent expansion, subsequently causing the energy that hence came to create a huge number of elementary particles; What they call the big bang. Energy can be converted into matter, it's the basis of physics. Those elementary particles, each acted in their own predetermined way. Flying around, combining, making atoms, making molecules, making every kind of matter. Giving form to everything in this universe. I don't believe in chance. I don't believe in quantum randomness. Everything is inevitable. The earth, the birth of humanity, cigarettes being made, you reading this post right now, the discussion that will unfold after that, the thought you just had... all of it. It was all laid out the moment the universe came into existence. Nothing more than the extension of the behavior of energy and elementary particles created 13.8 billion years ago. You can't change fate.
200 million years ago, our mammalian ancestors developed a neocortex, giving them a superior intellectual capacity. The neocortex continued to hypertrophy through the evolutionary process, giving rise to tools, to sociality, to complex emotions. This was all part of the script, as far as the universe was concerned. Even more contrived than anything you'd see in a Hollywood blockbuster.
🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 12:17:29 UTC No. 16462012
/sci/ - academic shilling and spaceflight nonsense
🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 11:46:17 UTC No. 16461992
Why was lead such a popular material historically?
🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 11:07:45 UTC No. 16461959
Looking for modern mathematical concepts which have been introduced by physicists in a non rigorous way but were later formalized by mathematicians in a rigorous way, like mirror symmetry.
🧵 Well, /sci/, is it?
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 08:15:57 UTC No. 16461897
Is prostate cancer really cancer or just a normal part of aging?
🧵 Math Stats I NEED HELP
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 08:03:39 UTC No. 16461893
I have been trying to figure out how P-values work but I don't exactly get it
Whenever I look stuff up all I can find is the stuff using a table but we weren't taught and we can't use the table
i inputted the formula for this right-tailed problem and it was considered it incorrect
I put this equation into a graphing calculator
X^2cdf(Xo^2,E99,n)
X^2cdf(38.24,E99,12) and got 1.402837008 E-4 not the 0.0001 which is correct
This is the equation my professor gave me so what am I doing wrong here?
🧵 How do I acquire a Varian V3900
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 06:50:11 UTC No. 16461857
Hi.
I’m interested in acquiring a Varian V3900 at a discount for something I’m planning on building. I’ve checked a few websites like govdeals for any discounted military or university magnets, but I can’t find anything. What websites or irl places should I frequent to find good deals for something like this electromagnet? I’d like to acquire it without spending more than $2000 ideally.
Thank you.
🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 04:45:36 UTC No. 16461801
When I was younger I had mathematics skills, iq above 130 gifted program yadda yadda yadda. One thing led to another and I stopped caring about school and had a 2.6 gpa in HS. I ended up getting an IT degree from picrel.Its easy work and good money but I always wanted to be a quant or work on wall street in some way. If I went back to school to get a masters in comp sci and then a second bachelors in mathematics or physics is that good enough to be a quant? What do I have to do to use math to create alpha and get paid for it?
🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 04:04:32 UTC No. 16461775
Basedentists. Is this considered a low 2d-4d ratio and what does this suggest about me.
🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 03:24:38 UTC No. 16461735
Has medical science come up with an accurate estimate or count of the total deaths from the reported coronavirus epidemic yet?
🗑️ 🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 01:57:17 UTC No. 16461651
How do I avoid left using science?
🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 01:27:57 UTC No. 16461624
How can people think to worship microwaves? I just couldn’t do it.
🧵 Should I major in physics
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 00:26:43 UTC No. 16461588
I mainly did cs during highschool and although cs is very fun (more so than even physics), i have come to the conclusion that a cs degree is a meme. The way it is taught in school is neither interesting nor very hard. Anyone who says it is hard is coping out of their mind. Show a cs major picard-lindelof to shut them up.
Theres also the fact that you can learn 99% of the stuff without blowing 200k.
I want to study physics in college but I don't want to become a homeless fag. I will try to adjust in a cs minor or even double major.
Can someone detail the post grad experience as a physics major
🗑️ 🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 00:20:49 UTC No. 16461582
>he wants to go to space
🧵 Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Mon, 4 Nov 2024 00:13:11 UTC No. 16461578
How can I test carbon dating myself? Or am I expected to just take the word of scientists that the method of testing is flawless?