Dang, I guess I didn't think of it that way.
Similar problem with Piano and Violin literature.
There just isn't enough time in a human life to learn all the good repertoire out there.
Similar problem w/ cello too.
I have a math major friend at a coffee shop who's 30-ish and is always reading math books. last I heard he was trying to publish a book, but no idea what is forte is.
Something about a calculus-set function thing that infinitely returns in on itself?
(pretty sure I slobbered all over that jargon. srry.) <__<
not just justice, poetic justice, and mostly in fictional settings. (I thrive off of ironic twists of fate, and the unexpected thrust of a blade.) Romanticizing death is intriguing.
IRL, I don't take pleasure in justice per say, more that I find comfort that there are at least clearly established systems and generally understood rules of conduct. I'd rather know where I stand than be left in the dark and in fear of what might happen and what I don't know.
The stance I'm defending (if I even have one) was arbitrarily chosen for the alleviation of my own boredom after work hours, since I don't have the monayz to go out really until friday. I don't honestly know what I think on the matter. I'm just enjoying my discussing with 8bit at the moment, and hopefully I'll arrive at my own viewpoint by the end.
(δ²/δx² + δ²/δy² + δ²/δz²)(ϕ)
man I kinda wish I hadn't given up math. I enjoyed calculus and was quite skilled at it. Then again, our schools standards weren't the highest, even in the calc classroom.
the power of metaphor, eh?
I do enjoy my fair share of poetic justice.
A guilty pleasure I suppose.
Some phrases are simply mesmerizing: especially the ones that go...g, B-flat, F, g. Like this one.
yea it should be able to go somewhere I would think.
I read the post and I just got to where you set up the conditional and broke it at the end with an abstraction of sorts (or so it seemed), so now I'm just tinkering w/ that idea.