On Apr 2, 7:49 pm, M Purcell <
sacsca...@aol.com> wrote:
> On Apr 2, 3:34 pm, mimus <
mimu...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Apr 2, 4:57 pm, M Purcell <
sacsca...@aol.com> wrote:
>
> > > On Apr 2, 12:24 pm, M Purcell <
sacsca...@aol.com> wrote:
>
> > > > On Apr 2, 12:12 pm, mimus <
mimu...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > > > He first got on the trail when dealing in engineering (switching
> > > > > circuits) with what turned out to be--and I can barely bring myself to
> > > > > type about this--logical imaginaries, the propositional-logical
> > > > > equivalents of using the number i in arithmetic.
>
> > > > It's just a phase.
>
> > > Sorry,
>
> > >
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phasor
>
> > > The use of a complex representation simplifies the mathematical
> > > treatment of waves and binary logic seems simplistic.
>
> > Of course modeling waves in terms of abstract waves is simplified.
>
> > Feh.
>
> How is it simplified?
The ugly stuff common to all the waves is supplied for ya:
It's like using x/inetd to write a GUI program:
http://groups.google.com/group/comp.programming/msg/c81c326584da0590
> > BTW, if you can model anything as a wave,
> > and any wave in terms of any other wave,
> > doesn't that mean you can model
> > anything in terms of anything else?
>
> You can't model everything as a wave
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.alien.vampire.flonk.flonk.flonk/browse_frm/thread/3f0c7b019a50163f
> however complex numbers are
> useful in cyclic processes, such as in electrical circuits, and GSB
> seems to relate them to logic.
But doesn't of course use numbers: numbers are much more complex
entities than the binary entities of LoF-- in Russell and Whitehead's
_ Principia Mathematica _, which attempts to make explicit the theory
implicit in ordinary arithmetic, it takes 362 pages of eye-wateringly-
dense notation to get to the point that one can add one plus one to
get two (LoF should be inserted in there as the first fifty pages or
so, although there are more problems with PM than its failure to touch
bottom and consider form per se).
--
I am confused, therefore I am.