Re: Mind's Eye Re: Thinking Earth

I think I was lucky. As a young child a raed a veritable mathematical tome which covered all sorts of mathematical ideas in a simplistic but unpatronising fashion. The name of this large thick book eludes me but it fostered a love for the subject. Lucky. As for the internet I don't think it will ever catch on, do you?
On Monday, 25 June 2012 17:33:46 UTC+12, rigsy03 wrote:
I didn't hate math but it certainly wasn't promoted for girls after
algebra- we were lured to the wild blue yonder of bull in the liberal
arts. But I bet you used math anyway. Life was fine without the
internet- how can you miss something that doesn't exist?

On Jun 24, 2:16 am, Allan H <allanh1...@gmail.com> wrote:
> hated math when I was a kid..  now it fascinating..  whoa is me, dumb dumb,
> dumb,  hmm but then the internet was not around either..  whoa is me..
> Allan
> lol
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> On Sun, Jun 24, 2012 at 6:53 AM, malcymo <malc...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > And to think that some mathematical ratios are also aesthetically
> > beautiful. I am thinking of the Golden Ratio in art and the most delightful
> > aspect ratio for a picture or TV screen.
>
> > On Sunday, June 24, 2012 4:26:15 AM UTC+12, pol.science kid wrote:
>
> >> I came accross this article mentioning the fibbonacci series... and
> >> the mathematical patterns in nature.. then i wikied it... there were
> >> too many concepts for me to grasp cos i am not familiar with math that
> >> much(i feel now i should do something about it).. it was really
> >> amazing for me... specific patterns.. in precison.. makes you wonder
> >> whether after there is a MIND that contains us... and whether there
> >> are accidents indeed?.. i kknow many of you atre science experts..
> >> please bulid the discussion as you might.. i would love to know
> >> more.... and know what you guys think...
>
> --
>  (
>   )
> |_D Allan
>
> Life is for moral, ethical and truthful living.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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