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I found a pattern in the relation of the bases and operands for logarithmic functions during a physics lecture. I lost the piece of paper that I did it on, though.
In phyics my Jr. year of HS, I came up with two theorums that I was really proud of. I used two chalkboards writing out something that showed that the decimals of... the roots of something I think... (it was a long fking time ago) repeated in descending order every other result. It was something like this: 1.36781239987 2.12553136421 4.72367812364 6.42125531312 9.14723678123 But a lot longer, and I don't really remember what the point was. The other had something to do with the number of verticies of a figure based on its dimensions (not length... think 2-d, 3-d, etc). Unfortunately, both were shown to me as being already-discovered theorums shortly thereafter. The first one was in an abstract algebra book, though. Look at me. I "formulated" an abstract algebra theorum in 11th grade. *flexes brain* |
Theorem*
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Hot damn! I was just phoneticizing it.
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It matters not whether you win or lose; what matters is whether I win or lose.
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Yes, I think Math is way better than literature.
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Penis pic boy!
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