Deeper than primes

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Such a short quotation and you still managed to misunderstand and misrepresent it.
This is another example of how jsfisher gets things only by a step-by-step reasoning.

By ignoring the content of http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=4805793&postcount=3651 he thinks that it is a reply to http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=4805764&postcount=3650 just because it technically follows it.

( the answer to http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=4805764&postcount=3650 is http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=4805795&postcount=3652 ).
 
This is another example of how jsfisher gets things only by a step-by-step reasoning.

Well, whatever style of thinking you are using, you need to rethink it. It continues to get you to incorrect results.


Here's a good example of how your thinking has let you down. I didn't ignore the content of your post. Quite the opposite. Upon rereading you may notice my post was specifically criticizing your misinterpretation of the simple two-sentence quotation you took from the Cut the Knot website. Not only did you mis-attribute the quote to Conway and Guy, you completely misunderstood what the actual author was suggesting was unexpected.

This is no surprise to anyone here, though.
 
jsfisher said:
you completely misunderstood what the actual author was suggesting was unexpected.

What is this strange use with the words "was" (you use it twice one after the other)?

Do you mean
jsfisher said:
you completely misunderstood what the actual author was suggesting , was unexpected.
?

Do you claim that nowadays Algebra and Geometry are not considered completely independent sciences by your community?

Also you ignore http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=4805347&postcount=3645 .
 
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1) Someone said something and you say Conway and Guy said it.
2) The original author suggested something was unexpected and you misunderstood what was unexpected.
1) My mistake, but it does not change my argument that the cut-the-knot author (2) clearly uses the word 'unexpected' (unexpected simple links between Algerbre and Geomety, like Ford Circles) exactly because according to jsfisher's community Algerbre and Geomety are nowadays consider as completely independent sciences.
 
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1) My mistake, but it does not change my argument that the cut-the-knot author (2) clearly uses the word 'unexpected' (unexpected simple links between Algerbre and Geomety, like Ford Circles) exactly because according to jsfisher's community Algerbre and Geomety are nowadays consider as completely independent sciences.

"...and many are quite unexpected in their simplicity" - their simplicity is unexpected, not the links themselves.
 
"...and many are quite unexpected in their simplicity" - their simplicity is unexpected, not the links themselves.
Their simplicity is unexpected, exactly becaue the current community of mathematicians claims that Algebra and Geomtry are independent of each other (this nonsense point of view began only in the sixteenth century).
 
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Their simplicity is unexpected, exactly becaue the current community of mathematicians claims that Algebra and Geomtry are independent of each other (this nonsense point of view began only in the sixteenth century).

This is not what makes their simplicity unexpected judging both from the structure of the sentence, and from the description of these links that follows.
 
Their simplicity is unexpected, exactly becaue the current community of mathematicians claims that Algebra and Geomtry are independent of each other (this nonsense point of view began only in the sixteenth century).

Be careful with all that backpedaling. You'll hurt yourself if the chain derails.
 
This is not what makes their simplicity unexpected judging both from the structure of the sentence, and from the description of these links that follows.

Hare it is again:
cut-the-knot said:
"Still Mathematics went its own way and nowadays Algebra and Geometry are considered completely independent sciences."

Fact 1: Nowadays Algebra and Geometry are considered completely independent sciences.

cut-the-knot said:
"But links between the two pop up now and then and many are quite unexpected in their simplicity."

Fact 2: If Algebra and Geometry are considered completely independent sciences, then it is unexpected to define simple links between them.
 
Hare it is again:
cut-the-knot said:
"Still Mathematics went its own way and nowadays Algebra and Geometry are considered completely independent sciences."

Fact 1: Nowadays Algebra and Geometry are considered completely independent sciences.

I suspect Alexander Bogomolny was being a bit more figurative than you would understand, but ok.

cut-the-knot said:
"But links between the two pop up now and then and many are quite unexpected in their simplicity."

Fact 2: If Algebra and Geometry are considered completely independent sciences, then it is unexpected to define simple links between them.

No. You jumped the gap from what Bogomolny actually wrote and what you want to be true.
 
Hare it is again:


Fact 1: Nowadays Algebra and Geometry are considered completely independent sciences.



Fact 2: If Algebra and Geometry are considered completely independent sciences, then it is unexpected to define simple links between them.

This is a perfect example of you giving your own interpretations for things, and then building mountains of baseless claims from these false interpretations.
 
Alexander Bogomolny (http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=81954) wrote in http://www.cut-the-knot.org/proofs/fords.shtml:

Alexander Bogomolny said:
For the Ancients who did not possess a proper symbolism for either specific (arithmetic) or generic (algebra) numbers, calculations were carried out in a geometric framework. A product of two numbers was represented by the area of a rectangle whose sides were given by the two numbers.
This is an historical fact about making calculations by using geometric framework.

Alexander Bogomolny said:
Algebra and arithmetic were finally separated from Geometry with the systematic introduction of algebraic notations that began only in the sixteenth century. In the seventeenth century, Rene Descartes (1596-1650) invented Analytic Geometry and claimed that any geometric problem can be solved algebraically. (Which is only true in principle because reduction of a geometric problem often leads to algebraic equations that we only know to solve approximately.)
We can learn that Geometry and Algebra are not fully translated to each other's framework, but instead of try to get the deeper and more profound links between the two frameworks, in order to unify Mathematics under a one comprehensive framework that clearly demonstrates the common source to both Algebra and Geometry, the community of Mathematicians took exactly the opposite idiotic way and as a result
Alexander Bogomolny said:
nowadays Algebra and Geometry are considered completely independent sciences. But links between the two pop up now and then and many are quite unexpected in their simplicity.
Now this community of mathematicians that took the wrong path for the mathematical science development, uses stupid phrases like "unexpected in their simplicity" about the simple links between Algebra and Geometry, exactly because they are missing the simple common ground of both Algebra and Geometry, and as a result of this dichotomist approach, the common ground randomally and unexpectedly "pops up" (Alexander Bogomolny usues "pop up" exactly because he belongs to a community that does not research and develop systematically the common ground of the mathematical science, and prefers to tear it apart to, so called, "independent sciences")

Jhsisher, you are not aware of my criticism about your community, where Alexander Bogomolny and you are members of it.
 
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