Re: Anyone Else Think About Three-Valued Logic?
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2017 11:35 pm
Thanks for the thermodynamic mnemonic, I'll copy it down. I wanted to find a few things like that before I start a new look in a few months at electricity, I took a commercial and Residential electric course a few years back in Ohio, and the National Electric Code (or the text book) opened up with a rule on electricity that was similar, but I wasn't prepared to tackle it then. Omhs law wheel I think it was.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohm%27s_law
Yeah, it is. You'll see the wheel down towards the bottom. I know I want the end result (once I find a few more wheels/graphs, and map it out against a certain periodic table {how I know this, I don't know, the reasoning is done subconsciously, I follow my hunches, they stick with me for years}) is to set up a system that allows me to merge the data with a basic rule of bifurcation (anytime a network with a mainline splits up into two sublimes) for any element or allow used for a conduit. I know I need to know about temperature, density, length, insulation, and white noise, besides the electrical charge. One periodic chart in particular keeps jumping out in my mind:
Stowe–Janet–Scerri Periodic Table
ADOMAH periodic table
I know the two periodic tables can be combined in a Wheel, similar to a old locksmith key cutting, operating perpendicular to the Ohms law, I don't know how I know, but I know, and it is a combination all pattern that results.
I started getting interested in this when I lived for a time in the woods off of St. Lewis Heights on Oahu, it had a electric tower than sent cables straight down a mountainside, almost verticals, so I sat down and tried to reverse engineer the categories of thought that would be needed to calculate in advance how wide, thick, strong the wire would have to be, and how long to make it.... as one obviously would have problems just laying uncut cord up a mountain and down the backside. I figured such a effort was made, and tried to guess at it.... but knew the mere existence of substations meant they didn't fully understand it themselves, given how erratic and unpredictable the overall system's efficiency could be. I remember from my residential electric course Aluminum and Copper aren't supposed to connect directly either. I want a more simple, intuitive grasp of why, and how to know when to do it. Undoubtedly a solution exists, but I want to do it, differently.... just cause.
Anyway, probably just reinventing the wheel here, but it is my wheel to reinvent. It is a idea I can't shake, and it looks you handed me another aspect, so thank you.
Um.... chromosomes are little computers unto themselves, but I don't think our brains are controlled by them in such a fashion, anymore than blueprints for a sky scrapper control the future business transactions of businesses occupying it. Obviously the building can't exist without blueprints, and it sets limits on what can and can't be done physically in that space, but doubt our chromosomes are effecting our thinking in such a way that we would have one class of logic per chromosome. But I can't hide the idea that some hidden force is at work like I described, putting limits or adding behavior to logic used in such long chains.
Cellular Autonamata isn't AI. It is just a simple rule pattern, like a checkerboard, that goes on forever seemingly. Some is uniformed, like a fractal pattern, other appear pure chaos, and nobody quite knows why. It is unfortunately built into our mathematics as a result.... as our number theory abides to many concepts of it. This echoes really old Pythagorean superstitions, and I don't know what to say to it. We expect to encounter life in space, to exist in unexpected forms, but not hidden in physics, or in our number system. This would hold for a alien species who can do patterns and basic geometry like rectangles, and can count linearly. It might be the universal mathematics for all I know.
And some truth does appear to exist for Epigenetics, I wasn't for it when I first heard of it, but was persuaded otherwise. I don't know how strong it is though as a effective force, or how reversible it is, but see some merit to it. It exists in other systems, like Ekistics (a philosophy of city planning. A butterfly effect of sorts that can cause weird traits to carry on in a society over the years, long after the original buildings or economic needs of a area dies off). This can happen in the transmission of technology as well.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohm%27s_law
Yeah, it is. You'll see the wheel down towards the bottom. I know I want the end result (once I find a few more wheels/graphs, and map it out against a certain periodic table {how I know this, I don't know, the reasoning is done subconsciously, I follow my hunches, they stick with me for years}) is to set up a system that allows me to merge the data with a basic rule of bifurcation (anytime a network with a mainline splits up into two sublimes) for any element or allow used for a conduit. I know I need to know about temperature, density, length, insulation, and white noise, besides the electrical charge. One periodic chart in particular keeps jumping out in my mind:
Stowe–Janet–Scerri Periodic Table
ADOMAH periodic table
I know the two periodic tables can be combined in a Wheel, similar to a old locksmith key cutting, operating perpendicular to the Ohms law, I don't know how I know, but I know, and it is a combination all pattern that results.
I started getting interested in this when I lived for a time in the woods off of St. Lewis Heights on Oahu, it had a electric tower than sent cables straight down a mountainside, almost verticals, so I sat down and tried to reverse engineer the categories of thought that would be needed to calculate in advance how wide, thick, strong the wire would have to be, and how long to make it.... as one obviously would have problems just laying uncut cord up a mountain and down the backside. I figured such a effort was made, and tried to guess at it.... but knew the mere existence of substations meant they didn't fully understand it themselves, given how erratic and unpredictable the overall system's efficiency could be. I remember from my residential electric course Aluminum and Copper aren't supposed to connect directly either. I want a more simple, intuitive grasp of why, and how to know when to do it. Undoubtedly a solution exists, but I want to do it, differently.... just cause.
Anyway, probably just reinventing the wheel here, but it is my wheel to reinvent. It is a idea I can't shake, and it looks you handed me another aspect, so thank you.
Um.... chromosomes are little computers unto themselves, but I don't think our brains are controlled by them in such a fashion, anymore than blueprints for a sky scrapper control the future business transactions of businesses occupying it. Obviously the building can't exist without blueprints, and it sets limits on what can and can't be done physically in that space, but doubt our chromosomes are effecting our thinking in such a way that we would have one class of logic per chromosome. But I can't hide the idea that some hidden force is at work like I described, putting limits or adding behavior to logic used in such long chains.
Cellular Autonamata isn't AI. It is just a simple rule pattern, like a checkerboard, that goes on forever seemingly. Some is uniformed, like a fractal pattern, other appear pure chaos, and nobody quite knows why. It is unfortunately built into our mathematics as a result.... as our number theory abides to many concepts of it. This echoes really old Pythagorean superstitions, and I don't know what to say to it. We expect to encounter life in space, to exist in unexpected forms, but not hidden in physics, or in our number system. This would hold for a alien species who can do patterns and basic geometry like rectangles, and can count linearly. It might be the universal mathematics for all I know.
And some truth does appear to exist for Epigenetics, I wasn't for it when I first heard of it, but was persuaded otherwise. I don't know how strong it is though as a effective force, or how reversible it is, but see some merit to it. It exists in other systems, like Ekistics (a philosophy of city planning. A butterfly effect of sorts that can cause weird traits to carry on in a society over the years, long after the original buildings or economic needs of a area dies off). This can happen in the transmission of technology as well.