What games can i turn things inside out?
What games can i turn things inside out?
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There is no way you can turn that thing inside out
I know. That's why I'm looking for games where I can.
C-Moon
You're right, you cannot do it with an ordinary sphere, like a basketball. You have to understand the rules of the game. This sphere is made of an abstract elastic material that can stretch and bend and pass through itself, but you cannot rip or puncture this material without destroying it. And you cannot crease it or bend it sharply.
heh
This video made me realize I will never be good at math.
hahha sphere funny sphere funny sphere funny!!!!!!!!!!!!
It's not a realm of math that has any practical use in the real world, don't feel bad.
saya no uta
Someone post the link, I'm gonna watch it again
Those ideas weren't invented overnight, you know
It does have a real practical use, it has to do with abstraction of thought, which in complex cases leads to new ideas to solve actual mathematical problems. I'm don't have the knowledge to explain it any easier, it's just that the examples often given don't immediatly show any practicality. They're more of an introduction to the concept of abstraction. Just like art deals with the emotional plane in a non conventional way that can't easily be put in words, abstract math leads to different trains of thought.
That's a lot of words to describe absolutely fucking nothing.
You could have been intellectually honest and claim that the methods used could be applied in more realistic situations, but nope!
Art, and feelings and shit.
are you retarded or something?
>which in complex cases leads to new ideas to solve actual mathematical problems
A nice demonstration that when faced with something they don't understand, some people show humility, and others lash out.
The real question is, what does a ramp look like when you turn it inside out?
a ramp
a pmar
This is great! Somebody should make a movie about this stuff.
And others pretend to understand, when in reality they are simply presenting face. go tip your fedora elsewhere love.
an arpm
>you're right, it's impossible
>however let me introduce all these bullshit rules that make it possible theoretically
whats the point?
Do you think allowing self intersections makes it easy? Try it.
no I don't, but I genuinely don't understand the point of these mathematical exercises that exist purely in the abstract
if they have some practical application I'd be very interested
Be careful, what about that ring around the equator? Remember, you mustn't tear or crease it.
Not the one you replied to but I think the reason they think of all the random shit like that is hoping that one day the little thought experiment could actually be useful
Mathematicians are pathetic and desperately trying to make themselves useful despite contributing nothing. Inb4 a bunch of mad mathematicians start throwing a tantrum about all the things "they" did.
How does this not even have 1 million views
nig its 2:30 in the morning I'm not looking to start an argument
I'm wondering why bother
well cheers hope they find something
Don't forget how they look down upon "applied mathematics", aka engineering, computer science, and the other "impure sciences" that actually build neat shit.
That's no good either. You're pinching it infinitely tight.
Some do, but many (maybe most in the case of higher level mathematics?) just find it fun in the same way people enjoy puzzles and riddles.
Could be a reupload
Mathematics has always been ahead of Physics. We don't know what math we should know yet, so trivial stuff today may become very important tomorrow.
Very interesting lecture from Feynman
youtube.com
You can blame government grants for that
>trying to make themselves useful
No
Mathematicians solve problems because they exist, making the solutions useful is up to other people
Hey man, if some fucks in the middle ages with a shit ton of free time can do it, you can too. Well not really, considering there's a lot more distractions now than there were in the middle ages that prevent you from keeping a critical train of thought.
No, mathematicians make problems that don't exist and solve them because they can't do anything else.
Exactly