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mastercheph

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mastercheph
·12 miesięcy temu·discuss
*or state owned media organizations.
mastercheph
·2 lata temu·discuss
Video games are lies, zeroes and ones masquerading as worlds and people; imbued with meaning by the power of dreams and dreamers
mastercheph
·2 lata temu·discuss
Somebody forgot to pay their bribe!
mastercheph
·2 lata temu·discuss
Relativity: The Special and the General Theory (1916) Einstein, Albert

https://www.abebooks.com/9780517884416/Relativity-Special-Ge...
mastercheph
·2 lata temu·discuss
Google
mastercheph
·2 lata temu·discuss
Why would you expect this character, the one who quotes Jung at length without ever having read anything he wrote, to remember and record if and what anyone said to him about Jung?
mastercheph
·2 lata temu·discuss
It depends on what you want from a mathematics education and what you want from your education at St. John's. It is not a vocational school, and the mathematics we do won't strictly be aligned with any particular career path. And the other advantage/disadvantage is that almost all of the math you have learned before you start is not helpful, at least for the first two years. Neither of those things mean that the math we do is any less serious or important than the math education most undergraduates will receive. [1]

Most people that are frustrated by one of the two things I mentioned above, either experience a shift in perspective, or do not complete their studies at St. John's.

Afaik they have been trying to fudge these numbers over the past few years because admin thinks it makes the school look bad, but fewer than 50% of freshman that enroll in the college will graduate. And at least a third of those that leave don't make it past the first semester.

[1] Just to paint a few broad strokes of the highlights of our math program: Freshman study Euclid's Elements and Optics, Archimedes, and Claudius Ptolemy's Almagest, Sophomores study Ptolemy, Copernicus, Kepler's Astronomia Nova, and Apollonius' Conics. Junior's study Newton, Maxwell, Oresme, Leibniz, Pascal, Descartes, and Dedekind. And Senior's work through Einstein, Lorentz, and Minkowski's relativity papers, before rounding the whole thing off with Lobochevsky, Bertrand Russell, and Gödel.