God & Square Roots III
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A brief preface lays out the purpose of the essay and goes over previous work. Chapter 1 makes clear that perpendicular projection of unit square side on to the diagonal always keeps the same ratio. You cannot divide lines with the same proportional measure. Obviously, this is due to the angle, and this continues indefinitely. So we need to multiply the diagonal by the root value to shrink the diagonal commensurable units down to the side units. But there is no way you can do this in certain bases, including our base ten system. And if the mantissa of the root has infinite mantissa positions as claimed by the irrational number crowd, how can the side of the square not also be equal to infinity? And then you have the diagonal exceeding a non-existent boundary or limit. Infinite by definition (as such a definition it is) has no limit to exceed. Chapter 2 states plainly that the solution cannot be solved in base ten notation, just as the fraction of 1/3 in base ten cannot be expressed perfectly (to a trivial zero ending) in notation form (.3333...). Chapter 3 projects the diagonal onto the side, makes parallel lines drop down to the origin of the Cartesian grid, using the last mantissa position measure of the root value. This guarantees a parallel line through the unit positions on the two sides, and this shows both the mantissa and unit value of the diagonal are commensurable. Then I review my ideas on different number units for orthogonal and non-orthogonal numbers. Chapter 4 appeals to puzzle solvers and religious people, viewing usual math devotees utterly corrupted by a totalitarian atheist cabal of academic misinformation, people unwilling to hear truth, see truth, speak truth. An appendix offers another way of proving the commensurable nature of the unit square using a mandala like division of the square, notwithstanding the problems with a solution already laid out.
Edward E. Rochon
I write for my health and the health of the world. Often the cure rivals the disease in grief and aches. My writing career started at twelve when I attempted to write a sequel to Huckleberry Finn but never finished it. My writings have included poetry, plays, a novel, non-fiction and writing newsletters for here and there. Recently, I am dabbling into short stories. Apart from newsletters, nothing has been published in print. I bought an audio recording of one of my poems but threw it away in disgust due to an inappropriate reading by the narrator. 'Contra Pantheism...' was my first eBook. About a hundred eBooks have been published since including some books of verse, and my essays collected into five volumes, and one volume of collected poems. A few other types of literature are on my list of published works. My essays deal with fundamental questions of philosophy as well as natural philosophy (science.) On the whole, my works are as far above the writings of Plato and Aristotle as the material power of the United States is over that of Ancient Greece. I once asked myself if I had ever written anything memorable, but couldn't remember exactly what I had written. I started to check my manuscripts but stopped as it seemed the answer to the question was obvious. Gore Vidal mentioned in one of his memoirs that writers tend to forget what they write and are a bad source to ask about their works. Gore knew a lot of writers. I have not and may have been a bit hard on myself. Apart from self-improvement and maybe making a few bucks, my main goal is to bring about a golden age for mankind. Being a man, this sounds appealing. It is pointless to desist and all small measures are worth the effort. Albert Camus thought suicide the only serious philosophical question. He was a fool and died young. Suicide is a waste of time. The most important functional question is: How do I get what I want? The one question that trumps this is the ultimate question of intent: What should I want? As Goethe pointed out: Be careful what you wish for in your youth, you might get it in middle age.
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