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00:05
@none math.ru.nl/~bosma/Students/CF.pdf have fun. I am happy if I was helpful to you even if I am not a mathematician ;)
Thank you, this seems very nice (and there's a chapter on decimal/continued fraction relationships).
Also, I think I figured out how to guarantee an interval around a number such that at least the first number of the continued fraction expansion coincides
(and for my purposes this will be enough for now)
 
1 hour later…
01:17
Hello guys!
I am trying to prove or disprove: $$ab\equiv x\pmod{n}\implies a\equiv x\pmod{n}\cdot b\equiv x\pmod{n}$$
01:36
@manooooh I don't understand the statement
@AkivaWeinberger I mean: knowing that $5^{22}\equiv1\pmod{23}$, can we replace it in: $(5^{22})^{71119}5^6\pmod{23}$?
To do that I think we must show these 2 results:

1) $ab\equiv x\pmod{n}\implies a\equiv x\pmod{n}\cdot b\equiv x\pmod{n}$

2) $a^b\equiv x\pmod{n}\implies(a\pmod{n})^b\equiv x\pmod{n}$
But I do not know if my notation is correct...
Your notation is not correct
@AkivaWeinberger hi
but $ab\equiv(a\bmod n)(b\bmod n)\pmod n$
in other words
01:40
if $a\equiv A\pmod n$ and $b\equiv B\pmod n$ then $ab\equiv AB\pmod n$
oh and did you watch my video
@AkivaWeinberger shouldn't it be the other way i.e. if $ab\equiv AB\pmod n$ then...?
No. Take $a=2$, $~b=3$, $~A=1$, and $B=6$
Then $ab\equiv AB$ (because $6\equiv 6$) but $a\not\equiv A$ and $b\not\equiv B$
@LeakyNun Which one?
13 hours ago, by Leaky Nun
@AkivaWeinberger https://www.kapwing.com/videos/5d70ff1c2b9b4c001469a4ba
Oh yeah
Yeah
@manooooh If $5^{22}\equiv1\pmod{23}$ then $(5^{22})^{71119}5^6\equiv5^6\pmod{23}$
01:43
@AkivaWeinberger how do you propose we solve my problem
What problem
Tuning leading tones?
Also what is Kapwing
oh, that is clear for me. Correct my implications: if $5^{22}\equiv1\pmod{23}$ then $(5^{22})^{71119}\equiv1^{71119}\pmod{23}$ and $1^{71119}=1$, so $(5^{22})^{71119}\equiv1\pmod{23}$, then $(5^{22})^{71119}\cdot5^6\equiv1\cdot5^6\pmod{23}$, so $(5^{22})^{71119}\cdot5^6\equiv5^6\pmod{23}$
Right?
Or is the "problem" that you end up somewhere else on the Tonnetz @LeakyNun
@manooooh Yes
01:45
Thank you!
kapwing is a video-editing tool
also til it's called the Tonnetz
I was trying to transcribe the Prelude in C into just intonation
I thought it up one day (thinking about visualizing the rations of just intonation) and shortly thereafter found out that it was already a thing
I saw it and didn't know its name
I don't know enough about composing in just intonation to be honest
No experience
I can't even properly sing in just intonation (not consciously, anyway)
Microtones are hard
I am only capable of music'ing through piano and voice
just intonation is like some harmonic heaven that is hard to get to
yeah so why i sent you the reddit is that melodically the leading tone should be higher (than the 12TET), yet harmonically it should be lower (than the 12TET)
01:49
I wonder how closely a cappella(sp?) choirs stick to 12TET
I spelled it right
But I feel they'd be more likely to slide into purer ratios
but also a cappella choirs are more likely to slide down and end up a half-step lower than they started
(or at least all the ones I've been in are)
just 'cause singing high is more effort
really
I guess it wouldn't happen if enough people have perfect pitch
I have decent relative pitch
Once, after practice, my mom and I and two other people from choir practiced one of our songs and didn't drop at all
so we concluded that it was the rest of the choir that was dragging us down
(This was in the summer before I went off to college)
This is the only confirmed way to get random strangers to clap, by the way^
Sing harmonies in a public place
are you Ashkenazi or Sephardi?
so you'd be having Shabbos tomorrow?
01:56
(Fun fact: I once new a Sephardi with the last name Ashkenazi)
@LeakyNun What, as opposed to Shabbat?
cool
yeah
I alternate
Shabbat is Modern Israeli Hebrew
I'm not very consistent
Also, until 8th grade, the school I was in was 90% Sephardi
It was in a neighborhood with a large Syrian Jewish population
so, outside of home and shul (synagogue) I would have heard "Shabbat" a lot more often
hmm I can't find a reading of genesis in liturgical ashkenazi pronunciation on youtube
I've heard it before in person
Bereishis boro elokim es hashomayim v'es ho'oretz
they pronouncs sav with a "s" right
01:59
Something like that
@LeakyNun Yeah
and the stress is on a different position
can you indicate stress?
I think the only difference in the first pasuk is "beREIshis" instead of "bereSHIT"
so
Beréishis boró elokím es hashomáyim v'es ho'óretz
Also it might be eloykim instead of elokim?
Not sure
Probably varies based on which European country it's from
And "o" is [ɔ]
(except for in "elokim")
Fun fact
In Modern Hebrew
Personal names tend to get Ashkenazi stress
So for example
My sister's name is Tova (TO-va)
and the feminine form of the word "good" is tova (to-VA)
Similarly, SHA-lom (the name) and sha-LOM (peace, hello/goodbye)
TIK-va (name) vs tik-VA (hope)
etc
(also yes my sister's name literally means "good")
I see
02:09
There's a saying "Gam zu letova" which means "This too is for the best" but can also mean "This too is for Tova"
She likes to bring this up
cool
in Hebrew alphabet?
גם זו לטובה
Or just her name is טובה
I see
Your name is "ken", yeah?
Written כן it means "yes" and written קן it means "nest"
my name is Kenny
02:13
"Kenny" would be "my nest"
(though with the accent on the last syllable)
kení
けに or けんに I wonder
Queni
google translate says ケニー
02:16
Ah
Kenii
Never understood why English -y becomes Japanese -ii in loanwords
It's not a long vowel in English
Then again, my dialect of American English doesn't have vowel length to begin with, so the whole thing is mysterious
I have no idea either
What common loanword in English is part Hawaiian and part Greek @LeakyNun
hmm
is it like a food name or something
because I don't know food
02:28
Maybe "loanword" isn't the right word
but half is loaned from Hawaiian and the other half is from Greek
hmm
do I have one in my room
hmm
interesting
ok give me the meaning of the greek part lol
so pedagogy
or school
02:33
Pedagogy is close
ok I have no idea
tell me lol
oh...
lol
Wiki means quick in Hawaiian
fair enough
02:37
Incidentally, [k] and [t] are allophones in Hawaiian
and are both spelled <k>
so I think wiki is pronounced [viti] in Hawaiian
Um
Never mind
Oh OK
Upon further research it seems they are in free variation
Same with [v] and [w]
  var today = new Date();
  var wkday = today.getDay();
  function thursday() {
    if (wkday == 4) {
      document.write('<h1 class="yes">YES</h1>');
    }
    else {
      document.write('<h1 class="no">NO</h1>');
    }
  }
yay it's so simplistic
02:52
cool
^I like this image but I don't know why
I know it has to do with the texture and the color choice
but I don't understand either of those on an intellectual level
Maybe I should learn graphic design at some point
Empty formal system:
Consider the following formal system
1. Empty language
2. Empty grammar
3. No axioms
nonverbal response
4. Empty inference rules
I wonder if the only theorem is empty
I think there are no theorems
The set of theorems is the empty set
Hm
Logical symbols aren't assumed to be implicitly included in the language
right?
02:58
that I need to double check, because some people do include them
So then we can't even assume the empty theorem is true
if they're not included
and this is just a set of rules for going from one sentence to another
If logical symbols are included then $\forall x,x=x$ should be true
and $\top$ if that's included
$\top\land\top$, $~\top\lor\bot$, etc
Tautologies, in other words
Ok, so for most definitions, symbols includes even the logic symbols, and the empty language has no strings at all, not even the empty string
Interestingly, the empty language pops up in many finite automata studies
1
Q: Is empty language a singly capacitated regular language?

user123429842 A singly capacitated regular language is such that exists a deterministic finite automaton (DFA) which has a single accepting state. For example an empty language (whose alphabet is an empty set) is singly capacitated regular language and here's a DFA demonstrating this: I don't understan...

So I am guessing, because the empty language does not accept even the empty string, the formal system will be rejecting everything, not sure if that can be called a ⊥ though
I need to think about it...
03:19
1
Q: Can we deduce anything from the empty set of axioms?

Fawzy HegabIf the set of logical axioms is empty and so is the set of non-logical axioms, then it seems we can't make any deduction.As the first formula in the deduction must belong to either sets or it it's deduced from previous formulas by means of a rule of inference (no such previous formulas even exis...

Ok, so even without logic symbols, it can still derive a tautology
must be one of those weird things about vacuous truths...
How do you write a tautology without even logic symbols
> See Ch.2.3 The Logical Axioms : the logical axioms are :

the three equality axioms [see page 56]

two quantifiers axioms [page 57].
It seems they're assuming those logical axioms are present
I can't say $\forall x,x=x$ if I don't know what $\forall$ and $=$ mean
or, for that matter, $,$
or bounded variables
Hm
30 mins ago, by Akiva Weinberger
user image
This being an orthogonal projection,
you could reflect it front-to-back without changing anything
like that bistable cube illusion
so there's two interpretations of that GIF
(It's the figure-eight knot which is chiral anyway though)
(or at least that's what the description said it is)
is that a trefoil?
I just said
The description said it was a figure-eight knot
o sorry, having conflicts with my brain that the image I see does not seemed to match up what I think of a figure 8 knot, while at the same time, it is not matching a trefoil
Probably a symptom of lack of sleep
5
Q: Why can't we generally replace inference rules with axioms?

DoleIs there a big difference in having insufficient axioms and insufficient inference rules/proof procedure to have a complete theory? It seems like in many cases adding a new inference rule or a new axiom has the same effect. For example, consider a language with 2-place connectives $\rightarrow, ...

> Eliminating all RoI (even just those that are not Axiom Schema) would make it impossible to introduce new theorems to the theory, so you would never be able to prove anything except what is explicitly assumed.
1
Q: Can BNF consist of zero rules?

HohmannfanI am trying to use BNF to describe its own grammar to get used to it. What I can not find any information about is whether BNF must consist of zero or more rules or one or more rules. The difference would be: <grammar> ::= <grammar> <rule> | <rule> vs. <grammar> ::= <grammar> <rule> | "" Th...

03:36
Property (1) $A$
Property (2) $A\implies B$
So we can conclude $B$, right?
Well we need a rule of inference
Property (3) Given $A$ and $A\implies B$, we can get $B$.
So now we can conclude $B$, right?
But don't we need another rule of inference?
Property (4) Given $A$, $A\implies B$, and "given $A$ and $A\implies B$, we can get $B$" (property (3)), we can get $B$.
"What the Tortoise Said to Achilles", written by Lewis Carroll in 1895 for the philosophical journal Mind, is a brief allegorical dialogue on the foundations of logic. The title alludes to one of Zeno's paradoxes of motion, in which Achilles could never overtake the tortoise in a race. In Carroll's dialogue, the tortoise challenges Achilles to use the force of logic to make him accept the conclusion of a simple deductive argument. Ultimately, Achilles fails, because the clever tortoise leads him into an infinite regression. == Summary of the dialogue == The discussion begins by considering the...
Modus ponens is defined by how you combine property 1,2 to get 3. so 1,2 are the inputs and 3 is the output
I think 4 is implicit as you plug the inputs into 1 and 2
OK so:
4: given 1, 2, and modus ponens, we can get 3
5: given 1, 2, 4, and modus ponens, we can get 3
6: given 1, 2, 4, 5, and modus ponens, we can get 3
@Secret If it turns out modus ponens was wrong, how would you know
You can't prove that modus ponens is right without using modus ponens
because you can't think without using modus ponens
3Blue1Brown has 2,070,834 subscribers
2^21 = 2,097,152
We're very close to another Q&A
Maybe a week away
Ah, I never thought about that before. That's a metasystem problem, because to interpret what modus ponens means without becoming circular, we need to interpret it outside the system we are using (where it is assumed to be valid)
I saw a story somewhere
Paraphrasing
"A philosophy professor challenged me to prove logically that I was awake and not dreaming"
"Eventually I came up with an airtight proof"
"and then I woke up"
The 3rd sentence sounds very meta system to me
03:47
I never finished Gödel Escher Bach
but somewhere in the first half of the book there's a sequence where the characters have a way to "push" themselves into a fictional world and "pop" themselves out of it
and if there's a book within a book you can push twice
and they mentioned that, on the level of reality, one of their friends "popped" and they don't know what happened to him
Weird book
I oughta pick it up again
 
7 hours later…
10:27
Hello!!

We have that a function $f:\mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R}$ is twice differentiable in $\mathbb{R}$ and it has infinitely many roots. To show that the equation $f''(x)=0$ has infinitely many roots, do we use the definition of the derivative?
10:39
Hey @LeakyNun !! Do you have an idea about the above?
11:07
I think you can apply the mean value theorem to that, @MaryStar
 
1 hour later…
12:21
Hello
Can someone help me with a true or false question?
Perhaps. It really depends on what the question is.
"There is only one way to parametrically represent the solution set of a linear equation." T or F
hello
someone can help me about my question? math.stackexchange.com/q/3340939/49660
thanks, I got stuck for days
 
1 hour later…
13:36
Saw this question on the main site: Find the equation of a cone whose center is the origin and which contains the circle $(x-2)^2+(y-3)^2=5 \wedge z=3$.
there's an elementary answer there, via a nice parametrization of the cone
But it seems like there should be an answer which appeals directly to projective geometry. Something along the lines of: If we homogenize the circle via $(x,y,z)\to (x/t,y/t,z/t)$, we get $(x-2t)^2+(y-3t)^2=5t^2 \wedge z=3t$. We can then eliminate $t$ to get $$(x-2(z/3))^2+(y-3(z/3)^2)^2=5(z/3)^2=0\implies (3x-2z)^2+9(y-z)^2=5 z^2$$
$(2+\sqrt{5}\cos t, 3+\sqrt{5}\sin t, 3)s$ which $t$ and $s$ are parameters, and $t$ ranges from 0 to $2\pi$
blah, last should have been $(x-2(z/3))^2+(y-3(z/3))^2=5(z/3)^2 \implies (3x-2z)^2+9(y-z)^2=5z^2$
Is that a legit way to derive this cone? It seems to work but I can't quite get the logic
the cone you are talking about is right circular?
yes
I just use the vector to describe the points on the cone.
fogive my english, if there is some confusing.
that's essentially the same as the answer I mentioned, yeah: math.stackexchange.com/a/3346243/137524
I'm just curious if there's a projective way of looking at it
especially since "homogenize and eliminate $t$" is such a simple process
@KumarNilesh you could also take the initial problem as defining an (infinite) oblique circular cone: the base is the given circle and the vertex is the origin
but any infinite oblique circular cone is equivalent to some infinite right circular cone
14:14
can we attempt it considering cone as Quotient space of algebric topology
We know the circle generating required cylinder and the point on which the end collapses
 
1 hour later…
15:28
Do hyperbolas always have two parts
we are learning about conic sections
For example $f(x)=1/x$ is a hyberbola
and it has a curve in the first QUAD. And the third quadrant
is $e^{1/x}$ a hyperbola
why do we work with hyperbolas with symmetry abou the y-axis, when we could just work with involutions
15:49
Hello guys, if I say that a function $u:X\rightarrow \mathbb{R} \in \mathcal{L}(\mu)$ (the function is $\mu$-integrable), one should understand that the function is ($\mu$)-integrable over all the domain $X$, could it happen that a function is integrable on a subset of the domain?
16:09
@Ultra: NO, $y=e^{1/x}$ is NOT a hyperbola. It has to specifically be a conic section, i.e., given by a quadratic equation.
@RScrlli: If it's integrable on the entire domain, it's integrable on any measurable subset. The converse is false.
16:20
P.S. @Ultra: When you learn some projective geometry, you'll find that all nondegenerate conics are the same — i.e., the hyperbola no longer has two parts, but just one, and "looks" just like an ellipse. Same for the parabola. The two "ends" meet at infinity.
 
2 hours later…
18:35
Hi there, if $T(\textbf{x})=A\textbf{x}$ is a linear transformation from $\mathbf{R}^n$ to $\mathbf{R}^m$, can the kernel of $T(\textbf{x})$ ker $T(x)$ (or ker $(A)$) equal the image of $T(\textbf{x})$ img $T(\textbf{x})$?
19:28
@schn: first of all, you're talking about the kernel of $T$ (no $x$'s). Second, if $m\ne n$, the domain and range are completely different spaces. If $m=n$, yes, you can certainly invent examples then where the image and kernel are identical.
 
2 hours later…
21:14
@TedShifrin Alright, thanks
22:06
@Ultradark Expanding on what @Ted said, consider projecting a sphere onto a plane from the center (called "gnomonic projection")
(Note that opposite points map to the same place on the plane, and that the equator doesn't map anywhere — or, alternatively, maps "to infinity")
Now place a small circle (not a great circle) on the sphere and project it. How does the projection change as the circle moves around?
If it doesn't intersect the equator, it makes an ellipse. If it's tangent to the equator, it makes a parabola. If it crosses the equator, it makes a hyperbola.
The two "ends" of the hyperbola can now be seen as two pieces of the circle, meeting at the equator (which maps to infinity)
(A great circle is a circle whose center is the center of the sphere. It's the largest circle possible on a sphere. Except for the equator, these all map to lines, covering the line twice over, as shown in the image.)
22:31
One can argue that verbosity is a proof tactic
assisting the prover in understanding more fo the underlying definitions before proceeding
22:57
@ShineOnYouCrazyDiamond whats up
23:55
hiii
any good set theory related zfc axioms out there? D:

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