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Univ of Western Ontario, a failed university with teachers like Dan Christensen attack dogs in sci.math, failures failures failures

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Michael Moroney

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May 23, 2018, 2:30:52 PM5/23/18
to
<snip usual nonsense>

Why do you attack the Dan Christensen at the Univ of Western Ontario when
the Dan Christensen who posts here has already told you that's someone
else with the same name?

Why do you keep reposting that same file with stalker lists (of staff
at the wrong university!) and unrelated so-called "proofs"??

alouatta....@gmail.com

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May 23, 2018, 2:47:57 PM5/23/18
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On Wednesday, May 23, 2018 at 11:10:43 AM UTC-7, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
> #3-8 Toto Space Product in Geometry Logic// Teaching True Mathematics
>
AGAIN!

Archimedes Plutonium

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May 23, 2018, 4:19:13 PM5/23/18
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    \\\|///\\\/
    \\  - -  //
     (  0 0  )
       \ ( ) /
oOOo    ~    oOOo STALKERS UNITED MOVIE

Newsgroups: sci.math
Date: Wed, 23 May 2018 12:12:47 -0700 (PDT)

Subject: easy to spot insane persons in sci.math-- normal people ignore and
filter who they hate-- insane like Michael Moroney stalks who he hates for 26
years nonstop
From: Archimedes Plutonium <plutonium....@gmail.com>
Injection-Date: Wed, 23 May 2018 19:12:49 +0000


easy to spot insane persons in sci.math-- normal people ignore and filter who they hate-- insane like Michael Moroney stalks who he hates for 26 years nonstop


Michael Moroney         writes:
1:30 PM (32 minutes ago)

Univ of Western Ontario, a failed university with teachers like Dan Christensen attack dogs in sci.math, failures failures failures

<snip usual nonsense>
>
>Why do you attack

NORMAL PEOPLE AVOID THOSE THEY HATE, not insane ones, for insane people like Moroney stalks stalks stalks for 26 years.


And the reason GOOGLE needs to allow authors of threads to own their thread and be able to delete stalkers, is because, well a science newsgroup keeps filling up with nothing but stalkers-- Jan Burse, Zelos Malum, Alouatta, Michael Moroney, Dan Christensen, Jan Bielawski, Karl Olav Nyberg, all insane stalkers whose each and every day is to fling darts at people they hate. And the set up of Google science newsgroups aids and abetts stalkers. It is not a level playing field for those actually doing science, but a playground for insane stalkers.

Normal people avoid those they hate, but Moroney was never normal but insane and why can he not set up a filter file instead of everyday-- AP I hate your guts.

Stop your insane stalking Moroney and set up a filter file with AP in it.


Originally I had a plan in mind for this movie, however I do not have the time to

detail the plan

Originally I had a plan in mind for this movie, however I do not have the time to

detail the plan

>

> acheron

>

>


> abrax...@aol.com (Abraxus263) 18 Nov 2001 15:35:01 GMT

>

> st...@accent.net (Earth Thing)

>

> simon adkins (sad...@roanoke.edu)

>

> In article (ue2gic...@fred.com) ae...@fred.com (aesop)

>

> dez...@usa.net (Dez Akin) 31 Dec 2001 05:56:42 -0800

>

> "Paul L. Allen" (p...@sktb.demon.co.uk)

>

> Brett Allison (2cch9s$b...@scunix2.harvard.edu)

>


>

> aam...@SPAMerols.com (amos)

>

> ban...@netcom.com (Brad Anders) Brad Anders / Phoenix, AZ

>

> "Jacob Andersen" (ja...@FOOjob.se)
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>

> "Paul B. Andersen" (paul.b....@hia.no) Wed, 8 Sep 2004 14:52:31 +0200

>

> Androcles 2010, Jun 19, 9:09 am , Headmaste_@_ogwarts.physics_z

>

> "Joao Antonio" (jas_b...@uol.com.br)
National Taiwan University Medical Campus Fri, 29 Aug 2003 19:32:05 -0300

>

> stl...@aol.com (STL137)

>

> aqu...@salus.med.uvm.edu (Tracy Aquilla)

>

> William Asher (x_a...@apl.washington.edu) Wed, 27 Jun 2001 11:23:12 -0700

>

> pr...@iq.org (Julian Assange)

>

> frank....@gmail.com Pollux, 2010, Jun 4, 10:52 pm

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> "Autymn D. C." (lysde...@sbcglobal.net) 9 Aug 2005 12:59:44 -0700

>

> "Pmb" (peter102560_nos...@comcast.net) Wed, 17 Jan 2007 00:27:44 -0500

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> jmfb...@aol.com Fri, 28 Jan 05 11:44:41 GMT

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> christian.bau 2010, Jul 17, 3:51 am

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> John Smith (ke...@hotmail.com) AndyB Fri, 14 Sep 2001 09:55:01 +0100

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> Ostap S. B. M. Bender Jr. 2010 Mar 15, 5:15 pm

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> Louis Pittsburgh, PA ldb_nos...@hotmail.com

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> Wayne Baisley (bai...@alumni.rice.edu)

>

> Jim Balter (j...@netcom.com)

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> "Brian Barnes" (peace...@worldnet.att.net) Fri, 16 Nov 2001 08:14:20 GMT

>

> "Kevin" (barry196...@yahoo.com)
Date: Fri, 22 Apr 2011 08:26:53 -0700

>

> wbar...@Starbase.NeoSoft.COM (William Barwell)

>

> John Bauer Tue, 30 Jan 2001 16:58:08 -0700
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque

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> "William L. Bahn" (will...@toomuchspam.net) Fri, 16 Sep 2005 21:47:05 -0600

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> Axel_...@b.maus.de (Axel Berger) Sat, 31 May 2003 15:16:00 +0200

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> e...@The-Institute.org (E Teflon Piano)
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> Eric Block (eric....@verizon.net) Sat, 31 May 2003 00:39:39 GMT

>

> Joe Bloe (Joe...@thebarattheendoftheuniverse.org)
Noah Bawdy , Sun, 09 Sep 2001 21:43:34 GMT

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> JDBeatty Milwaukee, Wisconsin jdbe...@execpc.com

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> Michael Beck <mb...@gc.cuny.edu>
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> Scott Begg (s...@deltanet.com) sco...@ucr.campus.mci.net (Scott Begg)

>

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> Jeroen Belleman 2010, Jun 5, 4:36 pm

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> palam...@prodigy.com (DR PHILIP P BENJAMIN)

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> Scott Berg
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>

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> Tim Blackmore (tim_bl...@notes.ipl.ca)

>

> Blake (z...@x.net) Thu, 06 Sep 2001 05:04:31 GMT

>

> (blu...@home.com) Mon, 05 Mar 2001 05:18:51 GMT

>

> Dr....@anl.gov (Dr. Bob)
(Dr.Bob-0609...@et212pc113.et.anl.gov)

>

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>

> WMBO...@ukcc.uky.edu (Bill Bone)

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> (lrboyce...@ibm.net)

>

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>

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>

> Mikey Brass (mi...@nospam.antiquityofman.com) Sun, 05 Sep 2004 18:51:06 +0100

>

> F Breuer (s952...@sun.ac.za)

>

> "Bama Brian" (bamaNO...@mindspring.com) Wed, 13 Jun 2001 10:50:27 -0700

>

> "d.b" (br...@nospam.har.har) (Pine.OSF.3.95.971001...@kemi.aau.dk)
(Pine.OSF.4.21.000515...@kemi.aau.dk), Dieter Britz (d...@kemi.aau.dk)

>

> Peter M. Brown Boston's North Shore
pm...@hotmail.com Thu, 25 Oct 2007 15:56:54 -0400

>

> Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Cortland County, New York, USA

>

> ro...@thegrid.net (Ross Brunetti)

>

> Group: talk.origins
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>

> Darin Burleigh (burl...@hackberry.chem.niu.edu)

>

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>

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>

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>

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>

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>

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>

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>

> ja...@purr.demon.co.uk (Jack Campin)

>

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>

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>

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>

> j...@dirac.csit.fsu.edu (Jim Carr) 10 Feb 2001 23:23:21 GMT

>

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>

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>

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>

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> elbert...@nwu.edu (Elbert I. Chang)

>

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>

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>

> Roger Christie (rchr...@spinach.xylogics.com)

>

> Kin Yan Chung (kin.ch...@erols.com) Nov 19 1997, 2:00 am

>

> cipher (cip...@mindspring.com)

>

> JC (je...@oyster.co.uk) (Jerry Clark)

>

> Mason A. Clark (maso...@THISix.netcom.comQQQ) Tue, 22 Feb 2005 08:17:06 GMT

>

> rgc...@phoebe.albany.edu (Robert Clark) (1994Jan3.0...@sarah.albany.edu)

>

> Simon Clark ://www.lancs.ac.uk/postgrad/clarksj/ (7t0agn$e3p$1...@nnrp1.deja.com)

>

> "Graeme Coates" (gd...@cam.spam.ac.uk) Sun, 14 Jan 2001 12:25:52 -0000

>

> good...@hotmail.com (Cognitee)
(good_brad-120...@ts009d08.min-mn.concentric.net)

>

> Martin Cohen mjc (mjco...@acm.org)
Date: Thu, 3 Feb 2011 19:45:15 -0800 (PST)

>

> Anthony Coleman 9:46am, 22 Dec 2008

>

> Alex Colvin al...@TheWorld.com
Dec 26, 2007 by Alex Colvin

>

> Graham Cooper <grahamcoop...@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 3 May 2012 15:16:00 -0700 (PDT) Herc

>

> John Conover, con...@email.rahul.net 23 Aug 2002 19:52:22 GMT

>

> Steve Conover (sc...@ZZZattbi.com) Fri, 28 Jun 2002 00:19:36 GMT

>

> edco...@shenhgts.net (Ed Conrad) Tue, 13 Aug 2002 03:01:33 +0000 (UTC)

>

> (constan...@yahoo.com) (Xns93D55F85B1...@140.99.99.130)
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>

> "Dann Corbit" (a-c...@microsoft.com)

>

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>

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>

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>

> c...@baker.math.niu.edu (Scott Craver)

>

> SUMMON (Sum...@cris.com)
(Pine.SUN.3.96.980508...@voyager.cris.com)

>

> Martin Crisp (Spam....@tesseract.com.au)

>

> dac...@prfsio.bio.unipr.it
(Davide Csermely - Univ. Parma, Italy)

>

> ps...@ix.netcom.com (Paul S.M. Curran)

>

> "James Curts" (james...@attbi.com) Sun, 25 May 2003 15:27:14 GMT

>

> dlzc  2010, Mar 26, 10:27 am, dl...@cox.net

>

> ElinorD (talk) 22:36, 1 June 2007 (UTC) Wikipedia editor

>

> k...@intac.com

>

> (5h0rds$3...@stronghold.dhp.com)

>

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>

> dave@beamlab ()

>

> davi...@varney.idbsu.edu (Andrew Davie)

>

> jrd...@netcom.com (John Davis)

>

> Philip Deitiker (Donev...@worlnet.att.net) Sat, 27 Nov 2004 04:50:10 GMT

>

> Wayne Delia (w...@deliafamily.net) Tue, 15 May 2007 17:59:48 GMT

>

> John DeMastri (dema...@ils.nwu.edu)

>

> Garry Denke 25 Oct 2002 16:32:27 -0700

>

> "Jim Deutch" (10313...@compuserve.com) Fri, 9 Mar 2001 10:48:46 -0500

>

> ed...@netcom.com (Eric Dew)

>

> p...@bozzie.demon.co.uk ("Paul C. Dickie")

>

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>

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>

> Dom (domi...@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu)

>

> dona...@numbat.murdoch.edu.au (Rebecca Donaldson)

>

> zo...@leonis.nus.sg (Etienne Douaze)

>

> Roger....@removethis.tafensw.edu.au (Roger Douglas)

>

> (Guerrilla Grrrl) gr...@dowco.com

>

> "Richard K. Downer" (richard....@boeing.com)

>

> do...@mmm.lanl.gov (Mark Doyle)

>

> d...@dandrake.com (Dan Drake) 14 Jun 2001 17:45:11 GMT

>

> "Dr. Don Drake" (d...@dondrake.com) Sat, 28 Apr 2001 01:10:28 GMT

>

> "Norm Dresner" (nd...@worldnet.att.net) Sun, 05 May 2002 16:03:12 GMT

>

> "Mike Dunford" (mdun...@erols.com)

>

> st...@typhoon.xnet.com (Joseph Dunphy)

>

> slot...@poisson.com (J Durbin)

>

> Bruce Durdle (bmdu...@taranaki.ac.nz)

>

> "Eaglestone, Robert [NGC:B918:EXCH]" (398AD161...@americasm01.nt.com)

Fri, 04 Aug 2000 09:21:21 -0500

>

> ro...@netcom.com (caustic liturgy) (roneEKM...@netcom.com) Ron Echeverri

>

> Jan Ritsema van Eck (J.Ri...@frw.ruu.nl) Academic Computer Centre Utrecht, (ACCU)

>

> bed...@csn.net (Bruce Ediger)

>

> Brad Edwards (brade...@emailaccount.com) Sat, 12 Jun 2004 17:08:39 -0400

>

> (6db5e2$537$1...@usenet87.supernews.com) "Ehrbar" (ehr...@oeonline.com)

>

> Victor Eijkhout (eijkh...@disco.cs.utk.edu) 2000/10/20

>

> ell...@mpi-muelheim.mpg.de (Mark Elliott)

>

> PSrRPd...@ican.net (R.D. Elliott)

>

> "Moataz H. Emam" (em...@physics.umass.edu) Fri, 10 Aug 2001 16:34:41 -0400

>

> Mike Engles mi...@sengles.dircon.co.uk

>

> "Stan Engel" (thori...@worldnet.att.net)

>

> w.er...@kfa-juelich.de (Wilm Erning)

>

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>

> David Erwin (er...@ucthpx.uct.ac.za)

>

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>

> chris...@mq.edu.au (Chris Evans)

>

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>

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>

> feldma...@my-deja.com (7s303n$ris$1...@nnrp1.deja.com)
"Denis Feldmann" (denis.f...@wanadoo.fr) Mon, 10 Jun 2002 22:15:39 +0200

>

> Joe Felsenstein j...@genetics.washington.edu
Dept. of Genetics, Univ. of Washington, Box 357360, Seattle, WA 98195-7360 USA

>

> "Robert Ferguson" (ferg...@bellsouth.net) Fri, 13 Feb 2004 18:59:27 -0500

>

> Jim Ferry //www.uiuc.edu/ph/www/jferry/

>

> cha...@fields.to (Charlie Fields) 9 Jul 2002 03:39:20 -0700

>

> js...@acca.nmsu.edu (Joe San Filippo)

>

> "Fin" (f...@albedo.demon.co.uk)
(958231813.14114.0...@news.demon.co.uk)

>

> kefi...@iglou.com (Ken Fischer)

>

> Joe Fischer (grav...@shell1.iglou.com) 24 Jan 2002 20:37:50 -0500

>

> "Mike Fisher" (biosu...@earthlink.net) Thu, 05 Apr 2001 14:27:34 GMT

>

> Edward Flaherty (flahe...@earthlink.net) Thu, 30 Aug 2001 00:53:13 GMT

>

> Brian J Flanagan (bfla...@blue.weeg.uiowa.edu)

>

> snow...@xyz.net (Jan Flora)

>

> dfo...@SPAM-FREE-sleepbot.com

>

> Mark Folsom folsom...@aol.com (FolsomMan) 1995/08/15

>

> Wayne Foote (wfo...@mint.net)

>

> df...@belvedere.sbay.org (David E. Fox)

>

> Charles Francis (cha...@clef.demon.co.uk) Sun, 17 Jun 2001 07:16:34 +0100

>

> Eric Francis, Dartmouth Murders book

>

> mfra...@winternet.com (Michael Frankowski)

>

> Gravity...@webtv.net (tj Frazir) Tue, 12 Aug 2003 22:55:05 -0400 (EDT)

>

> s34...@student.uq.edu.au (Ian Fredericks)

>

> el...@mail.bcpl.lib.md.us (Eli Freedman)

>

> s_fr...@oz.plymouth.edu (Shawn M. Freeman)

>

> alz...@freenet.toronto.ca

>

> Dominic Frisina (domi...@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu)

>

> Jim Frohnhofer fij...@nomurany.com (6eon9t$m34$1...@nnrp1.dejanews.com)

>

> "Stephen J Fromm" (stephe...@verizon.net) Wed, 02 Apr 2003 01:32:36 GMT

>

> Steve Gamage (s...@tn.rl.ac.uk) CCLRC Rutherford Appleton Lab

>

> Jonathan Gardner (gar...@cardomain.com) Sat, 16 Jun 2001 17:48:55 -0700

>

> n_gard...@hotmail.com (Nick Gardner) 5 Sep 2002 19:00:27 -0700

>

> Jose Lucio Sanchez Garrido <jose.sanc...@ciencias.unam.mx>
Date: Tue, 14 Jun 2011 06:55:23 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Jun 14 2011 8:55 am

>

> Please...@here.invalid (Bob Geary) Wed, 25 Oct 2000 22:42:19 GMT

>

> Jota geba...@gusun.georgetown.edu

>

> "George" (geo...@yourservice.com) Thu, 28 Sep 2006 12:57:38 -0400
X-Complaints-To: ab...@insightbb.com

>

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>

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> afn1...@afn.org (David Gibson)

>

> "Robert Gilster" (grob...@qwest.net) Tue, 23 Apr 2002 16:54:08 -0700

>

> eglam...@angelfire.com (Edward Glamkowski) 11 Nov 2003 09:21:27 -0800

>

> Shaun Davis-Gluyas

>

> RB (RB...@gnn.com)

>

> Bart Goddard (goddar...@netscape.net) 21 Aug 2009, 16:12:02 GMT

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>

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>

> Lamont Granquist (lamontg at u dot washington dot edu)

>

> dmgr...@acsu.buffalo.edu (Daniel M Grasso)

>

> rcgr...@disposable.com (Rich Graves)

>

> (CrCx7...@acsu.buffalo.edu) ban...@acsu.buffalo.edu (Graviton)

>

> gre...@ptdcs2.intel.com (Jeff Greason)
Fri, 1 Apr 1994 17:02:18 GMT

>

> Edward Green 10 Feb 2007 15:28:38 -0800


>

> gre...@cs.unc.edu (George Greene)

14 Sep 2004 11:20:37 -0700

>

> cgre...@gw-tech.com (Carey Gregory)

(36f5aa9e...@news2.ziplink.net)


>

> kgro...@pen.k12.va.us (Kurt Grosshans)

>

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>

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>

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>

> Ron Guilmette, Roseville, CA r...@monkeys.com

>

> Richard Guy (ric...@guyy.demon.co.uk)

>

> Jonathan E. Guyer (http://www.his.com/~jguyer/)

>

> John H. (The Watcher) (33bdbb4e...@news.wustl.edu)

>

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>

> "Steven Hales" (sha...@pipeline.com) (6hofti$5qg$1...@camel29.mindspring.com)

>

> Bob Haley Aug 21 1995, 1:00 am

>

> j...@avondale.demon.co.uk (John F Hall)

>

> 13 Aug 2000 10:12:39 GMT "W. Dale Hall" (wdh...@concentric.net)

>

> jhal...@neteze.com (Joshua Halpern) 19 Mar 2002 15:51:16 -0800

>

> hami...@uab.edu (Tracy P. Hamilton) Fri, 16 Aug 2002 14:25:14 +0000 (UTC)


> Larry Hammick @telus.net 8 Mar 2006 03:55:30 -0800

>

> Brent Hamstra (hams...@Chem.LSA.umich.edu)

>

> Martin Hannigan Jul 17, 3:27 am

>

> rodd...@mit.edu (David Harden) 23 Aug 2002 07:39:42 -0700

>

> Peter Harding (har...@herald.ox.ac.uk) Wed, 13 Aug 2003 08:48:39 +0100

>

> "Mikito Harakiri" (mikha...@iahu.com) Fri, 11 Jun 2004 10:41:10 -0700

>

> Scott Aaron Hart (sa...@faraday.clas.virginia.edu)

>

> (DJI33...@news.hawaii.edu)

>

> hawt...@waikato.ac.nz

>

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>

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> "Jim Heckman" (wnzrfe...@lnubb.pbz) Wed, 25 Sep 2002 11:37:13 GMT

>

> David Hedrick (davidb...@nxs.net) Wed, 24 Oct 2001 11:11:24 -0400

>

> ch...@eso.mc.xerox.com (Chris Heiny)

>

> Bryan Heit (bjh...@NOSPAM.ucalgary.ca) Thu, 08 Jan 2004 08:28:36 -0700

>

> (David.H...@virgin.net)

>

> anon...@nyx10.cs.du.edu (henry)

>

> "Richard Henry" (rphe...@home.com) Thu, 28 Jul 2005 22:13:26 -0700

>

> Edward D. Herko e-h...@nwu.edu

>

> Michael Hess (bbs...@mindspring.com) (6g1o61$b...@camel15.mindspring.com)

>

> Joshua Hewitt; jhewitt[at]geocities.com
Room 1109A, Astrophysics Group, Blackett Laboratory
Imperial College, Prince Consort Road, London, SW7 2BZ, UK

>

> Bill Hey (bil...@SPAMchirons.demon.co.uk> Fri, 29 Dec 2000 12:30:48 +0000

>

> Thomas Higens (mu...@wizzdom.net)
Sat, 17 Nov 2001 04:41:43 -0500

>

> Group: sci.skeptic 2008 Aug 23 by Garrison Hilliard

>

> paulholba...@freenet.de (Paul Holbach) 30 Aug 2002 06:42:08 -0700

>

> dcholi...@ev1.net (David Holiman) 29 Aug 2005 23:12:10 -0700

>

> Frank_H...@sbphrd.com.see-sig (Triple Quadrophenic)

>

> REBECCA HOLTE (hol...@nevada.edu)

>

> Ed Hook, Computer Sciences Corporation, NAS, NASA Ames Research Center

(8knffi$gn3$2...@sun500.nas.nasa.gov)

>

> Alan M. Horowitz horow...@cod.nosc.mil

>

> q...@pobox.com (Paul Hsieh) 28 Jul 2002 20:01:03 -0700

>

> a...@vvtp.tn.tudelft.nl (bert hubert)

>

> hue...@virtu.sar.usf.edu John F. Huesman

>

> huf...@indiana.edu (John C. Huffman)

>

> William Hughes (wpihug...@gmail.com)
Date: Mon, 7 Feb 2011 13:14:50 -0800 (PST)

>

> hu...@biology.queensu.ca (Deb Hume)

>

> pat...@io.com (Patrick L. Humphrey) (szk1zuo...@pentagon.io.com)

>

> sch...@is7.nyu.edu (Steven Christopher Huntsman)

>

> HU...@vmsa.csd.mu.edu

>

> (T-Files) tf...@ibm.net

>

> "Timothy Iafolla" (tiaf...@erols.com)

>

> xxyzz (xx...@idt.net) NNTP-Posting-Host: ppp-29.ts-14.nyc.idt.net

>

> "Samhain" (postm...@localhost.com) (6gdmkr$k0k$3...@news.indigo.ie)

>

> "His Holiness the Reverend Doktor Xenophon Fenderson, the Carbon(d)ated"
(xeno...@irtnog.org) (w4ok97x...@irtnog.org)

>

> "Ioannis" (morph...@olympus.mons) Thu, 23 Mar 2006 01:49:47 +0200
NNTP-Posting-Host: athnrd02.forthnet.gr

>

> been there done that (nos...@isp.com) Wed, 09 Aug 2000 16:37:24 GMT

>

> 'Onan The Contrarian' thed...@tsoft.com
(kuKN1.557$S23.7...@news14.ispnews.com)

>

> Group: comp.lang.java.programmer
Dec 11, 2007 by Owen Jacobson

>

> Jeff Janowick he...@h-net.msu.edu

>

> "n" (ne...@tkc.ne.jp) (6m5rcd$e6o$2...@news.tokyo.att.ne.jp)

>

> "D. Lloyd Jarmusch" (org...@aloha.net)

>

> "Peter Jason" (pa...@colonel.com.au) Wed, 12 Jan 2005 07:51:25 +1100

>

> jay...@panix.com (Jay C Jachimiak)

>

> bja...@iwaynet.net Benj 2010, Jun 7, 12:54 am

>

> Alan Johnson (ajoh...@t-online.de) Mon, 04 Sep 2000 21:31:41 +0200

>

> Dec 27, 2007 by David L. Johnson

>

> "Mark Johnson" (inva...@example.com) Sat, 10 May 2008 12:07:57 -0700

>

> cia...@popd.ix.netcom.com (Wayne Johnson)

>

> Tim Jokela (tjo...@icis.on.ca)

>

> cjo...@ix.cs.uoregon.edu (Christopher Michael Jones)

>

> Mitchell Jones (mjo...@21cenlogic.com) Wed, 05 Mar 2008 17:38:04 -0600

>

> fjo...@netten.net (Franklin Jordan)

>

> Andreas Jung, aj...@informatik.uni-rostock.de

>

> Jennifer Kahn, Discover magazine, April 2002

>

> "David Kain" (djk...@rocketmail.com) Sun, 10 May 2009 23:41:44 -0700

>

> "John C. Kalinowski" (john.ka...@dol.net)

>

> stefan...@zetnet.co.uk (Stefan Kapusniak)

>

> Aidan Karley - Thurs, May 18 2006 1:39 am

>

> fkasner (fka...@rcn.com) Wed, 27 Aug 2003 01:05:20 GMT

>

> kay...@ix.netcom.com

>

> "Barry Kearns" (bke...@frii.com) Wed, 7 Mar 2001 11:39:43 -0700

>

> TKeating 2010, Jul 11, 12:21 pm

>

> nick.k...@marconi.com (Nick Keighley) Thu, 15 Aug 2002 11:29:53 +0000 (UTC)

>

> "D.H. Kelly" (dke...@nanaimo.ark.com)

>

> Jkelly 23:18, 1 June 2007 (UTC)
and Herostratus 23:26, 1 June 2007 (UTC) Wikipedia editors

>

> "kibby" (richard.blank...@gmail.com) 22 Mar 2006 14:28:38 -0800
NNTP-Posting-Host: 130.85.243.230

>

> Ken Kifer kenk...@kenkifer.com

>

> ee...@bloch.leeds.ac.uk (Dr Paul Kinsler)

>

> Joe...@webtv.net (Joseph Kinz)

(6282-397...@storefull-223.iap.bryant.webtv.net)

>

> Dave Kisor (tige...@pop3.concentric.net)

>

> Aug 21, 2008 by Cary Kittrell

>

> Barb Knox (s...@sig.below) Mon, 15 Oct 2007 11:49:41 +1300

>

> jkol...@copper.ucs.indiana.edu (joseph richard koleszar)

>

> "Robert J. Kolker" (bobk...@attbi.com) Fri, 12 Jul 2002 20:52:21 -0400

>

> Matthew Koudys (mko...@nev.npiec.on.ca)

>

> mikhail...@mail.ru (Mikhail Kovalev) 22 Apr 2002 04:16:21 -0700

>

> Zdislav V. Kovarik kova...@mcmail.cis.McMaster.CA (Zdislav V. Kovarik) 1995/07/16

>

> "Tim Kozusko" (timko...@mindspring.com) Fri, 27 Dec 2002 19:09:32 -0500

>

> bugtom...@bugap.net (tomkremer) (B17617869...@d-15.portal-02.ap.net)

>

> Karl Krieger (k...@ipp-garching.mpg.de)

>

> (kun...@tdl.com) Rob Kunkle

>

> (3548E3FC...@biokin.com)
Petr Kuzmic Ph.D. * BioKin Ltd. * Madison, WI 53708-8336, USA
pku...@biokin.com

>

> jlad...@pmgm.Stanford.EDU (John Ladasky)

>

> "David A. Lamb" (la...@cc.tacom.army.mil) U.S. Army TACOM-TARDEC

>

> PN...@lamp.ac.uk

>

> Scott Lanning (slan...@buphy.bu.edu)

>

> Ashcrow Larkspurr (Ash...@worldnet.att.net) Sat, 09 Dec 2000 06:06:11 GMT

>

> sam laurie (ssla...@gate.net)

>

> John K.C. Lewis (co...@kelvin.physics.mun.ca)
Department of Physics & Physical Oceanography
Memorial University of Newfoundland
St. John's, NF
Canada A1B 3X7.

>

> Jim Lillie , Wed, May 17 2006 4:01 pm

>

> John A. Limpert j...@Radix.Net (John A. Limpert) 1998/03/28

>

> Harold Lindaberry (har...@epix.net)

>

> "Neville Lindsay" (nev...@bigpond.net.au) Sat, 08 Nov 2003 05:46:47 GMT

>

> Robert Lindsay, NASA - Goddard, Greenbelt MD
rlin...@seadas.qsfc.nasa.gov

>

> Tim Little 2010, Jul 16, 2:16 am, sci.math

>

> Llo...@flk.com (Ami Llorta)

>

> Da....@mail.utexas.edu

>

> lo...@dialup.ptt.ru (Jeffrey Lockshin)

>

> Jerry Lodriguss (j...@astropix.com)

>

> lofs...@lava.net (Karen Lofstrom)

>

> long...@aol.com (LongmuirG) 16 Aug 2004 20:51:55 GMT

>

> M.R.L...@massey.ac.nz (Malcolm Loudon)

>

> lo...@dodo.thchem.ox.ac.uk

>

> dtl...@quads.uchicago.edu (D. T.K. Lu)

>

> Mario Luoni, Hitachi Central Research Lab

>

> "Paul Lutus" (nos...@nosite.com)
Giganews.Com - Premium News Outsourcing Fri, 19 Jan 2001 16:49:34 GMT

>

> "William A. Lynn III" (wal...@worldnet.att.net)

>

> dly...@stats.tcd.ie (Donal Lyons)

>

> "Richard Lyon" (rl...@ozemail.com.au)

>

> Robert Lutz (rwl...@mchsi.com) Fri, 07 Feb 2003 01:57:15 GMT

>

> "Ivan M." (iva...@VEdarkside.ru)
Sat, 18 May 2002 21:28:02 +0200
(ac69mi$i4k$1...@bagan.srce.hr)

>

> Michaelsbll, Wikipedia, Revision as of 22:46, 29 December 2007, Utah State University censor

>

> gmacbeth (gmac...@cawdor.freezingrain.ca)
(77vi2j$g5c$1...@watserv3.uwaterloo.ca)

>

> Mike MacDonald (mma...@ll.mit.edu)

>

> Cliff MacGillivray (cl...@excite.com) Fri, 17 Apr 2009 22:29:41 -0400

>

> DOM...@macollamh.ucd.ie

>

> Andrew MacRae (mac...@pandora.geo.ucalgary.ca)

>

> (6dk264$2pa$1...@nntp1.ba.best.com)
(Tjames Madison)

>

> James F. Mahaffy mah...@dordt.edu

>

> rehamk...@gmail.com
Dec 29, 2009 6:51 AM
patrick maher

>

> "karl malbrain" (kar...@acm.org)

>

> Maleki (male...@hotmail.com) Sun, 19 Jan 2003 13:20:49 -0600

>

> Shahin Malekpour (shahin.m...@virgin.net)

>

> mal...@malloc.com (malloc) (33b2c99f...@news.microserve.net)

>

> "Bryan J. Maloney" (bj...@cornell.edu)

>

> John Mann John...@cc.monash.edu.au

>

> Willem-Jan Markerink w.j.ma...@a1.nl

>

> Craig Markwardt 2010, May 7, 9:37 pm sci.physics

>

> Gary Marriott (ga...@garym.demon.co.uk)

>

> Geoffrey C Marshall (co...@ozemail.com.au)

>

> krismar...@hotmail.com (Kris Marshall) 4 Jul 2002 05:24:00 -0700
132.227.64.154

>

> Mars...@msrice.demon.co.uk

>

> "Richard Mateles"(rmat...@candida.com)
(01bcd813$15b6a1c0$609efecc@newmicronpc)

>

> "Bob May" (bob...@access1.net)
NNTP-Posting-Host: sandiego11-32.sandiego.access1.net

>

> Jay Maynard
jmayn...@thebrain.conmicro.cx (Jay Maynard) Sat, 14 Jul 2001 21:55:26 GMT

>

> Cr...@interactive.rogers.com (Robert McClelland) Mon, 23 Apr 2001 05:41:21 -0400 (EDT)

>

> Thomas McDonald (ts...@wwt.net) Fri, 13 Dec 2002 16:33:04 -0600

>

> Mark McFall mmc...@esrpp.esrpp.fro.mp.usbr.gov

>

> jimm...@yahoo.com (Jim McGinn) 17 Jan 2003 09:05:47 -0800

>

> jmcg...@metric.inch.com (John McGowan)

>

> website: world.std.com/~mmcirvin/kibology/wonka.html

>

> Daniel Kian Mc Kiernan (dmck...@weber.ucsd.edu)

>

> mcki...@math.psu.edu (William R McKinney) 4 Apr 1994 21:52:57 GMT

>

> MCL...@LNS62.LNS.CORNELL.EDU

>

> Sep 1, 2007 by Tim McNamara and by Mike Vandeman

>

> Weathe...@hotmail.com (Michael McNeil) 22 Jul 2003 10:11:50 -0700

>

> Derek McPhee (djmc...@sympatico.ca) Wed, 07 Mar 2001 16:55:16 GMT

>

> David Meacham (kit...@erols.com) Mon, 21 May 2001 05:24:15 -0400

>

> Chris Mead
Hilborough, Norfolk
chris...@zetnet.co.uk (200008090...@zetnet.co.uk)

>

> Ron Meisenheimer r...@ns.net (Ron Meisenheimer) 1996/04/04

>

> "Mekon"
BigPond Internet Services (http://www.bigpond.net.au)
Thu, 14 Dec 2000 06:52:07 GMT

>

> a...@vir.com (Michael Mell)

>

> mme...@cars3.uchicago.edu Sun, 29 Feb 2004 01:22:21 GMT

>

> "Albý van der Merwe ZA" (vdme...@intekom.co.za)


>

> met...@oddjob.uchicago.edu (Chris Metzler)

>

> Gerry Myerson (g...@maths.mq.edi.ai.i2u4email) Thu, 09 Mar 2006 02:33:48 GMT

>

> rmic...@nwu.edu (Bob Michaelson)

>

> Margaret Mikulska (miku...@europe.com) Wed, 25 Sep 2002 03:39:31 -0400

>

>myt...@iname.com (Niels M. Miller) (3575b1aa...@news.cybercity.dk)
(niels_...@bigfoot.com)

>

> "Tom Miller" (tomi...@melbpc.org.au) Sat, 21 Jul 2001 08:47:22 +1000

>

> Sturla Molden (stu...@stud.ntnu.no)

>

> myt...@iname.com (Niels M. MÏller) (35b2fb95...@news.cybercity.dk)

>

> John Moffat (jmo...@ford.com)

>

> se...@sun23.cs.wisc.edu (Sean Mooney)

>

> amo...@Xenon.Stanford.EDU (Alan Morgan) 30 Apr 2002 22:55:13 GMT

>

> wtmo...@pilot.msu.edu (Bill Morgan)

>

> "Daniel A. Morgan" (dmo...@exesolutions.com)

>

> "Ryan Morris" (rmo...@rogers.wave.ca) (6e47rd$jsr$1...@news.on)

>

> PETER JULIAN WILSDON MORRISH (pj...@st-andrews.ac.uk)

>

> "John H. Morrison" (jo...@alumni.caltech.edu) 24 Oct 2000 08:53:11 -0500

>

> Keith Morrison Sat, 05 May 2007 11:28:10 -0600

>

> Tom Moyer (tmoy...@home.com) Wed, 09 May 2001 19:33:56 GMT

>

> Kirk Mueller kdmu...@ccgate.hac.com

>

> imu...@mail.island.net (Ian Murphy)

>

> On Saturday, November 2, 2013 10:02:45 PM UTC-5, Jennifer Murphy

>

> na...@pluto.njcc.com (John Nahay)

>

> Rob J. Nauta r...@pobox.com

>

> Russell Nelson (nel...@crynwr.com) (m24sbwj...@desk.crynwr.com)

>

> Jan 15, 2008 by Nomen Nescio

>

> ta...@commercialsoliciticationskiller.tarl.net (Tarl Neustaedter - SMCC Software)

>

> "Louis Newstrom" (lnew...@bellsouth.net) Fri, 5 Oct 2001 01:34:31 -0400

>

> Darren Newton (dne...@morgan.ucs.mun.ca)

>

> Philip Nicholls (pn...@capital.net)

>

> Pierce Nichols (pn...@columbia.edu)

>

> nit...@u.washington.edu

>

> ev-mi...@nrm.se (Michael Noreen)

>

> r norman (r_s_norman@_comcast.net) Mon, 03 Nov 2008 16:57:43 -0500

>

> Jim Norton (jimn4...@aol.com)

>

> Dave Norton 29 June 2008

>

> John S. Novak, III j...@cris.com

>

> af...@james.freenet.hamilton.on.ca (Scott Nudds)

>

> Ed Nuhfer (enuh...@carbon.cudenver.edu) 1995/09/18


>

> nut...@aol.com (Nuttzz)

>

> David Nyarko
"The poster formerly known as Colleyville Alan" (nos...@nospam.net)
Wed, 9 Jan 2008 23:06:12 -0600

>

> rny...@force.stwing.upenn.edu (Roy Nyberg)

>

> "Magnus Nyborg" ((remove)magnus...@mensa.se)

>

> jo...@mailhost.dpie.gov.au (Julian O'Dea)

>

> "odin" (ragna...@yahoo.com) Fri, 16 Sep 2005 12:18:03 -0700

>

> Darkchyld (a...@okstate.edu)

>

> lolk...@sfu.ca (Lance Olkovick)

>

> Lee Olsen 2009, Nov 5, 4:04 pm

>

> Paul D Oosterhout
I work for SAIC (but I don't speak for SAIC) Paul O
Mar 9, 7:51 am, 2009

>

> "Ryan O'Rielley" (srd...@earthlink.net) Fri, 04 Jan 2002 00:14:29 GMT

>

> Dave Orton (01d9142c...@usw-ex0103-023.remarq.com)

>

> "Ozymandias" (ozy.ma...@inorbit.com) (iGv31.108$cl5.3...@read.cal.sfl.net)

>

> naart...@aol.com (Jamie Page) 02 Jan 2002 14:54:07 GMT

>

> "Mike Painter" (mpai...@maxinet.com)

> (61hg6c$r...@snews2.zippo.com)

>

> alanp...@thefree.net (Alan Palmer)

>

> flpa...@ripco.com (Frank Palmer)

>

> Greg Pavelcak g...@oitunix.oit.umass.edu

>

> William Tunstal...@genius2000.com

>

> "Anthony J. Pelletier Ph.D." (antho...@scripps.edu) 1999/01/11

>

> Peltier (Leo...@Peltier.com) Wed, 14 Aug 2002 11:33:17 GMT

>

> Jim Pennino (ji...@specsol.com) Mon, 28 Oct 2002 19:46:56 +0000 (UTC)

>

> wpen...@interaccess.com (William R. Penrose)

>

> (355EDB...@not.real.com) Pensador (pe...@not.real.com)

>

> Cletis Perkins (cletis....@yahoo.com) 7/8/2008 11:57 PM

>

> Richard Perry (rp...@cswnet.com) Sat, 24 Nov 2001 08:38:06 -0600

>

> "Iulian Persinaru " (iul...@idirect.com)

>

> Peterkingiron 17:42, 3 June 2007 (UTC) Wikipedia editor

>

> sci.math 22Mar, 2009, 1:24pm by Tim Peters

>

> "Matti MÔki-PetÔys" (Matti.ma...@Iki.fi)
(6s5n3v$fla$1...@learnet.freenet.hut.fi)
NNTP-Posting-Host: nat-1942529613.tietovalli.fi

>

> robpeter...@iname.com (35b484b...@news.flash.net)

>

> Larry Phillips (lar...@home.com) (38FE83DE...@home.com)

>

> Richard D Pierce
Jun 18 1994, 4:46 pm

| Dick Pierce |
| Loudspeaker and Software Consulting |
| 17 Sartelle Street Pepperell, MA 01463 |
| (508) 433-9183 (Voice and FAX)
>

> "Marc H. Pinsonneault" (pin...@tinsley.mpsxohio-statexedu)

>

> pip...@topdog.cs.umbc.edu (Stephen Pipkin)

>

> erky...@netcom.com (Andrew Plotkin)

>

> Plutonius Plutarch (plu...@pu.org)

>

> RP...@uic.edu (Rob Pope)

>

> por...@netvision.net.il (Y.Porat)

> Path: p7ni6626qat.0!nntp.google.com!border1.nntp.dca.giganews.com!nntp.giganews.com!usenet.blueworldhosting.com!feeder01.blueworldhosting.com!feeder.erje.net!eu.feeder.erje.net!eternal-september.org!feeder.eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: "Port563" <read...@eternal-september.org> December 2013

>

> Path: dartvax.dartmouth.edu!news.bu.edu!lll
winken.llnl.gov!uwm.edu!math.ohio
state.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.mathworks
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pot...@brainiac.com (Potter)

>

> Ben Potter (bpo...@pobox.alaska.net) Tue, 24 Dec 2002 12:28:31 -0900

>

> Paul (pssaw...@comcast.net.INVALID)
Date: Fri, 12 Aug 2011 20:31:33 +0000 (UTC)
Local: Fri, Aug 12 2011 3:31 pm

>

> John M. Price, PhD jmp...@calweb.com

>

> Steve Price
r...@kaiwan.com (Steve Price) 9 Feb 1995 22:54:32 -0800


>

> danny_...@hotmail.com (Danny Purvis) 29 Oct 2003 11:57:31 -0800

>

>Path:dartvax.dartmouth.edu!news.bu.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!
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>



> ger...@indigo.ie (Gerry Quinn)

>

> ptdo...@i-link.net (Harley Quinn) (30bfd0b5...@news.i-link.net)

>

> Kevin D Quitt USA 91351-4454

>

> From: Jürgen R. (jurg...@arcor.de)
Date: Sat, 5 Nov 2011 14:04:27 +0100

>

> John Rappe (jra...@gmx.net) Sun, 23 Mar 2008 05:40:57 +0000 (UTC)

>

> Rajarshi Ray (raja...@home.com) Fri, 28 Jul 2000 03:04:47 GMT

>

> Chromosome Terror (abrd...@reading.ac.uk)

>

> Patrick Reany (re...@asu.edu) Sat, 29 Jun 2002 06:13:38 -0700

>

> bwr...@u.washington.edu (Bryan Reed) 11 Dec 2001 22:01:50 GMT

>

> reh...@cs.indiana.edu (John Rehling)
(8s2qs2$269$1...@flotsam.uits.indiana.edu)

>

> Ivan Reid, Ivan...@brunel.ac.uk

>

> rre...@clark.net (Ronald Reiner)

>

> "RTR" (remski@flashDELETE_THIS_PART_IF_NOT_SPAM.net)
(XMaJ2.242$8A2...@news.flash.net)

>

> "Dave L. Renfro" (renfr...@cmich.edu) 23 Mar 2006 06:48:18 -0800

>

> gr...@skatter.usask.ca (Greg Retzlaff)

>

> "Cliff Rhodes" (crh...@flash.net)

>

> Michael Richmann (rich...@cmt.anl.gov)
rich...@concentric.net.spamaway (MKR)

>

> "Daniel Riddick" (inexpensivedoma...@audubonstrings.com)
Fri, 28 Nov 2008 13:05:02 -0800


>

> Daniel Ridge (ridge_...@jpmorgan.com)

>

> Charles Riggs (ri...@tinet.ie)

>

> Court Jester (raen...@sprintmail.com)

>

> nos...@ripco.com (Bloody Viking) (8kk8u3$rl0$7...@gail.ripco.com)

>

> d...@cyber3.servtech.com (dan ritter)

>

> Jason V Robertson Oct 8 1994, 9:25 pm

>

> brob...@minerva.cis.yale.edu (Bruce Robinson)

>

> "Chuck" (crobi...@earthlink.net) Sat, 12 Jun 2004 17:23:14 GMT

>

> "Michael Robinson (BIO)" (mrob...@chuma.cas.usf.edu)

>

> Pe...@rjhill.co.nz (Peter Robinson)

>

> Angus Rodgers (twir...@bigfoot.com) Mon, 15 Oct 2007 10:43:31 +0100

>

> "Dennis M. Rodgers" (rod...@fsl.noaa.gov) Mon, 25 Jun 2001 09:28:47 -0600

>

> Terence M. Rokop
Mon, 4 Oct 1993 09:14:52 -0400

>

> Brian J. Ross (br...@cosc.brocku.ca)

>

> Etienne Rouette (etienne...@sympatico.ca)

>

> www.math.ualberta.ca/~runde/mylinks. Volker Runde

>

> BinBE (j...@rci.rutgers.edu)
(35E1BC...@rci.rutgers.edu)
NNTP-Posting-Host: amenti.rutgers.edu

>

> CCRyder (fusi...@directway.com)
Sun, 04 Apr 2004 18:21:59 -0700 (040420041821599958%fusi...@directway.com)

>

> jr...@cornell.edu (Jonathan Rynd)

>

> "GS" (n...@home.com) Thu, 15 Jun 2006 23:11:54 +0100

>

> "Sabya" (bisw...@osu.edu) Thu, 11 Sep 2003 16:44:54 -0400

>

> psal...@landau.ucdavis.edu

>

> Daliah Saper (dsa...@nths.covis.nwu.edu)

>

> Jack Sarfatti (sarfa...@pacbell.net) Thu, 03 May 2007 21:42:56 EDT

>

> sa...@sgi.com (Eddie Saxe)

>

> David Schaafsma (drd...@jnpcs.com)
Organization: Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC

>

> Ace Schallger (phys...@att.net)

>

> Herb Schaltegger Thu, 28 Jul 2005 12:15:16 -0500

>

> Wintr...@webtv.net (Heather Schildroth)
Sat, 22 Sep 2001 13:10:08 -0500 (CDT)

>

> (36CBE...@sympatico.ca) Gerry Schneider

>

> jer...@wolfenet.com (Jerome Schroeder)

>

> Richard Scoreville - 01 Jul 2011 09:07 GMT


>

> Path:dartvax.dartmouth.edu!sol.caps.maine.edu!news3.near.net!paperboy.wellfleet.
com!news-feed1.peachnet.edu!gatech!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.exodus.net!news.
wni.com!noc.netcom.net!usenet From: Mads...@hell.com (The Mad Scottsman)

>

> sha...@graceland.uwaterloo.ca (Jeffrey Shallit)

>

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>

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>

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>

> m...@panix.com (Michael L. Siemon)

>

> David Silberstein (dav...@kithrup.com)

>

> Bareena Silverman 1999/01/11

>

> rdsil...@qed.com

>

> "Ken Sisby" (elr...@sympatico.ca) Sun, 3 Feb 2002 19:12:13 -0600

>

> Charles Slade (csl...@ix.netcom.com) 1996/08/15

>

> cas...@ksu.edu (Charles A Smith)

>

> gws...@gwi.net (Gene Ward Smith) (6h1cmh$oq9$1...@noc1.gwi.net)

>

> "Harry J. Smith" (hjs...@ix.netcom.com) Sat, 4 May 2002 17:04:57 -0700

>

> tp...@Virginia.EDU (Timothy Paul Smith)

>

> "Barrie Snell" (bar...@globalnet.co.uk)

>

> ww.rain.org/~snowe/flt.exp

>

> "Larry Snyder" (lsny...@pacific.net) Wed, 30 Apr 2008 00:24:58 -0700

>

> Christopher Specker (ch...@email.uah.edu)
1 Mar 2001 22:22:52 GMT The University of Alabama in Huntsville

>

> Jens Stuckelberger (Jens_Stuc...@nowhere.net)
Sun, 29 Dec 2013 02:23:56 +0000 (UTC)


> "Steve Spence" (ssp...@webconx.com) Mon, 17 Jul 2000 11:23:49 GMT

>

> di...@liverpool.ac.uk (Mr D.F. Steele)

>

> nos...@noothanks.invalid (John Steinberg)
(nospam-3006...@modem-214b.nyc.fcc.net)

>

> "H.Stevenson" (stev...@idirect.com) www.myna.com/~namhae/index.html

>

> joats...@aol.com (JoatSimeon) S.M. Stirling

>

> Ian Stirling (ro...@mauve.demon.co.uk) (7ia8vu$qae$1...@wallace.stir.ac.uk)

>

> Travis Stone

>

> Phil Storm

>

> 02:18, 11 April 2007 Paul Studier (Talk | contribs) (rm ref to Archimedes Plutonium who is notable only as a nut case) Wikipedia "mitigation of global warming"

>

> Prem Subrahmanyam (pr...@noblestar.net) (399ACADD...@noblestar.net)

>

> js...@athena.mit.edu (Jim Sun)

>

> ra...@ansoft.com Ravi Sundaram

>

> "H. Svensson" (d95...@nada.kth.se)

>

> swanson@nospam_on.net (Eric Swanson)
Mon, 17 Sep 2001 01:35:36 +0000 (UTC) Info Avenue Internet Services, LLC

>

> jms...@aeternitas.cis.yale.edu (John Sykes)

>

> Thomas Sebastian Szymkiewicz (mr...@WPI.EDU)

>

> Duane Takamine

>

> Patrick I Taylor (pata...@nortelnetworks.com) Thu, 07 Mar 2002 15:58:46 -0600

>

> ze...@acadiacom.net (Tenebreux)

>

> Brian Tenneson
From: ten...@gmail.com
Injection-Date: Sun, 27 Sep 2015 17:47:24 +0000


>

> ja...@pc.jaring.my (James Teo) Wed, 22 Aug 2001 03:09:19 GMT

>

> Michele Tepper

>

> Terpin, Michael & Patchen, Michael gina (gina-r...@ml.gina.com)

>

> th...@ews.uiuc.edu (tharp jeffrey m)

>

> Dec 24, 2007 Jonah Thomas

>

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(01bd5c22$7c1d9980$7683cbcf@jefftnc)

>

> "Phil Thompson" Fri, 21 Sep 2001 19:58:00 GMT

>

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>

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>

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>

> tis...@ceph.cephb.fr

>

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>

> "Herman Trivilino" (phys...@kingwoodREMOVECAPScable.com)
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>

> Jean-Paul Turcaud Sun, 27 Jul 2003 16:51:52 +0200

>

> Martin Tysanner (tysa...@ix.netcom.com)
(395D1361...@ix.netcom.com)

>

> anon-...@anon.twwells.com ((-|spunky|+)
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>

> Path:dartvax.dartmouth.edu!news.bu.edu!purdue!
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!usenet From: Aristotle Uranium (aris...@lyceum.edu)

>

> Bill Vajk (bill9...@hotmailDITCHTHIS.com) Sat, 23 Aug 2003 20:01:43 GMT

>

> Paul van Delst (paul.v...@noaa.gov) Wed, 29 Aug 2001 17:56:58 -0400

>

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>

> Robert Vienneau Sat, May 13 2006 4:00 am

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> jvi...@cyberhighway.net (John Vinson)

>

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> hnt...@aol.com (HntrRos) (67s445$i90$1...@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU)

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> Jim Voege (an...@sprint.ca)

>

> Achim Voss ach...@gmx.de

>

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>

> Helmut Wabnig <hwabnig@.- --- -. DOTat>
Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2011 14:54:18 +0100

>

> "Preston Wade" (muf...@kda.attmil.ne.jp) Mon, 16 Apr 2001 14:34:28 +0900

>

> (5hd06h$nak$2...@wagner.spc.videotron.ca)

>

> Jeff Wagner (nob...@spamcop.net) Tue, 03 Apr 2001 00:29:53 -0400

>

> "T Wake" (Usenet.es...@gishpuppy.com) Thurs, Jun 29 2006 11:45 am

>

> James Waldby Wed, 24 Jan 2007 23:00:52 -0700

>

> Andrew Walduck (postm...@localhost.com)

>

> ro...@127.0.0.1 jawalker @ ccgate dp beckman com

>

> tom...@email.msn.com

>

> hwa...@fbch.tuwien.ac.at (Heinz Wanzenboeck)

>

> bward*remove_this*@ix.netcom.com (Bill Ward)

>

> "Wayne Ward" (Wayne...@Zytek.co.uk) Wed, 31 Jan 2001 09:30:41 -0000

>

> "Jeremy Warmsley" University of Cambridge, England Thu, 2 May 2002 01:39:29 +0100

>

> ewar...@my-deja.com (Eamon) 23 Aug 2002 22:14:09 -0700

>

> Henry Warwick (hwar...@macromedia.com)

>

> thw...@prairie.NoDak.edu (Superdave the Wonderchemist)

>

> "Peter Webb" (pw...@DIESPAMDIEopticonaustralia.biz) Feb 9, 2004, 10:50pm

>

> "Dan Webster" (dweb...@GSVMS2.CC.GASOU.EDU)

>

> Mark Weishan (m...@umich.edu)

>

> dwe...@ramtops.demon.co.uk (Doug Weller)
Tue, 27 Feb 2007 20:11:14 +0000

>

> Brian Whatcott Sun, Oct 1 2006 1:18 pm

>

> Darren White (whi...@plasma.usask.ca)

>

> "David.E.White" (David....@noaa.gov)
Thu, 13 Jun 2002 09:22:29 -0600

>

> Thomas Wiegmann, MD twie...@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu

>

> Andrew Wiles, Princeton Univ.

>

> tony...@aladdin.co.uk (tonywilk)

>

> wil...@wehi.edu.au (John Wilkins) Wed, 21 May 2003 02:27:28 +0000 (UTC)

>

> Kent Wills (compu...@gmail.com) Sun, 13 May 2007 07:03:37 -0500

>

> "Jonathan Williams" (psy...@nottingham.ac.uk>
ACS, The University of Nottingham Fri, 23 Feb 2001 00:22:11 -0000

>

> Kevin S. Wilson, Thurs, Dec 21 2006 3:14 pm

>

> jeffery...@mail.com (Jeffery) 12 Nov 2003 10:22:19 -0800

>

> "S.Witherspoon" (mon...@gte.net)

>

> Michael Wodzak (wod...@lie.math.missouri.edu)

>

> dw...@nospamwolfenet.com

>

> "Thomas Womack" (mert...@sable.ox.ac.uk)

>

> Bret Wood (bret...@cs.uoregon.edu)

>

> Jeffrey N. Woodford jwood...@unlinfo.unl.edu

>

>"Palmer Woodrow" BigPond Internet Services (http://www.bigpond.net.au)
Wed, 12 Dec 2001 16:21:12 GMT

>

> cliff wright (c.c.wri...@paradise.net.nz) Mon, 19 Feb 2007 00:02:03 +1300

>

> s00...@desire.wright.edu

>

> Ryan Younce (you...@coastalnet.com)

>

> yst...@kjemi.unit.no (Martin Ystenes)


>

> jbs...@aol.com (JbsZee) 01 May 2001 23:00:12 GMT

>

> zel...@oak.math.ucla.edu (Michael Zeleny)

>

Newsgroups: sci.math
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> styx

>

> Received: by 10.204.136.212 with SMTP id s20mr407462bkt.5.1327618250335;
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>

> //www.aber.ac.uk/~ddh95/loony.htm


>

> rda...@ubmail.ubalt.edu (Dick Adams)




> User Profile for: bacle
UserID:
638290
Name:
bacle
Email:

Registered:
6/6/10
Location:
nyc
Biography:
2d year grad student
Total Posts:
386

Date: Aug 16, 2012 1:08 AM
Author: bacle
Subject: Re:Even a baboon can Copy and Paste. Fuck Off, Loser Plutonium.


Path: p10ni48093485pbh.1!nntp.google.com!npeer03.iad.highwinds-media.com!news.highwinds-media.com!feed-me.highwinds-media.com!postnews.google.com!glegroupsg2000goo.googlegroups.com!not-for-mail
From: hber...@gmail.com









UserID:
772084
Name:
herbert azuna
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Registered:
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Total Posts:
6


Date: Sep 29, 2011 6:47 AM
Author: herbert azuna
Subject: Master Logician "Precision Definition" baboon plutonium misuses basic<br> terms like "fallacy", yet chides all others on lack of accuracy


>

> Sep 22 1995, 2:00 am
r...@me04.wg2.waii.com (Bob Aduddell)

>

> 20 Jun 2000 14:35:33 -0700, Russ Allbery (r...@stanford.edu)

>

> Kevin Allegood ri...@mindspring.com (Riboflavin)

>

>
> alouatta....@gmail.com

>

> alte...@plains.NoDak.edu (Karl Altenburg) bunyips

>

> Tommy.A...@abc.se

>

> "Paul B. Andersen" (paul.b....@hia.no) Wed, 8 Sep 2004 14:52:31 +0200

>

> John Andrieson" (.)
(7gkbmh$977$1...@nntp8.atl.mindspring.net)

>

> "David T. Ashley" (dtas...@kalman.eng.wayne.edu) Thu, 2 May 2002 15:37:14 -0400

>

> au...@acs.ucalgary.ca (Christopher Auld)

>

> Tom Bacle, NYC, Sep 5, 2009 4:03 AM
Path: g2news1.google.com!news4.google.com!news1.google.com!news.glorb.com!tr22g12.aset.psu.edu!news.mathforum.org!not-for-mail
From: bacle <h...@here.com>
Date: Fri, 31 Dec 2010 17:42:00 EST

>

> Steve Baker n...@invalid.net sci physics sci bio misc soc history
Nov 7, 2007 by Steve Baker - 4 messages - 3 authors

>

> Roger Bagula (rlbag...@sbcglobal.net) Fri, 21 Jul 2006 21:03:38 GMT and Underwood Dudley Mathematical Cranks book

>

> (1994Jun24....@perkin-elmer.com)
bajo...@Perkin-Elmer.com (Andrew Bajorinas)

>

> dwb...@yahoo.com (David Bandel)
19 Jul 2004 08:20:32 -0700

>

> abau...@awinc.com (Arn Bauslaugh)

>

> baus...@math.ucalgary.ca www.math.ucalgary.ca (Bruce Bauslaugh)

>

> jm...@leland.Stanford.EDU (Joseph Michael Bay)
Feb 14 1998, 2:00 am

>

> andy beckwith (beck...@bayou.uh.edu)

>

> ni...@primenet.com (Nick S Bensema)

>

> (65535.1...@news.sparkplug.com)
fbe...@sparkplug.com (Fred Berfel)

>

> Jos Bergervoet (berg...@iaehv.iae.nl)
Internet Access Eindhoven, the Netherlands
>

> j...@iris8.msi.com (Jan Bielawski)
>

> Marc Bissonnette (dragnet\_@_/internalysis.com)
Wed, 13 Aug 2008 16:04:40 -0500
>

> Dan Bloomquist Wed, Jun 21 2006 12:15 pm

>

> Bill Bonde (std...@mailexcite.com) (36EAD835...@mailexcite.com)

>

> Alan Boswell (alan.b...@nospam.baesystems.com)
Fri, 13 Oct 2000 16:46:26 +0100

>

> david.b...@chemistry.gatech.edu (David Bostwick)

>

> pbo...@aol.com (P Bowles) 30 Apr 2003 20:27:32 GMT

>

> se...@panix.com (Seth Breidbart)
Sun, 9 Sep 2007 07:15:54 +0000 (UTC)

>

> Luke Breinig (lbre...@ix.netcom.com) Mon, 10 Jul 2000 19:59:23 GMT

>

> "Peter T. Breuer" (p...@oboe.it.uc3m.es) Fri, 16 Aug 2002 16:11:37 +0200


>

> dbro...@metz.une.edu.au (David Bromage)

>

> Geoff Bronner (geoff....@dartmouth.edu)

>

> Scott Brown Sep 11 1993, 2:58 pm

>

> Wayne Brown (fwb...@bellsouth.net) Mon, 10 Jun 2002 18:29:10 GMT

>

> Material Fellow jbu...@pacbell.net
20 Dec 2000 13:50:25 -0800 jbuch1 (jbu...@ezl.com>

>

> Norm (nbuc...@gpu.srv.ualberta.ca)

>

> Ben Bullock@KEK Jul 30 1995, 1:00 am

>

> John Burrage //members.iinet.net.au/~burrage/

>


> Jan Burse (janbu...@fastmail.fm) Wed, 22 Mar 2006 23:04:53 +0100
X-Complaints-To: ne...@hispeed.ch

Newsgroups: sci.math
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From: burs...@gmail.com
Injection-Date: Thu, 31 Aug 2017 08:17:17 +0000





> Jane A. Buskey (kid prank Dartmouth??)

>

> t t p ;//butterfly.net/obvious/kooks.html

>

> Donna, DC (dcinc...@home.com) Fri, 19 Jan 2001 04:25:06 GMT

>

> Adrian Cable (mega...@jimc.demon.co.uk)

>

> Charles Cagle Sun, 03 Sep 2000 21:44:00 GMT

>

> K.K.Campbell & Karl Mamer k...@netizen.org

>

> Richard Carr (rc...@columbia.edu)

>

> Bob Casanova (nos...@buzz.off) Sat, 29 Mar 2008 15:15:56 -0700

>

> "Carlos Casteneda" (mktt...@optonline.net) (enOC4.849$h5.13110@news02)

>

> cdcdcdcd29...@yahoo.com 28 Sep 2006 05:33:19 -0700

>

> "Cereoid*" (cer...@prodigy.net)
Prodigy Internet http://www.prodigy.com Sat, 02 Aug 2003 10:25:49 GMT

>

> Dean Chamberlain (Pine.GSO.3.93.980624...@maggie.uncg.edu)

>

> j...@a.cs.okstate.edu (John Chandler)

>

> Deb Chatterjee (1995Aug29.1...@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu)

>

> Andrea Chen (fallin...@earthlink.net)
NNTP-Posting-Host: 1cust100.tnt1.sfo3.da.uu.net

>

> micha...@aol.comUrPants (Take off UrPants to reply) 11 Dec 2002 08:38:30 GMT

>


>From: Dan Christensen <Dan_Chr...@sympatico.ca>
Injection-Date: Fri, 04 Jul 2014 21:35:28 +0000

>

> John Chunko (jd...@po.cwru.edu)

>

> J. Porter Clark (jpc...@suespammers.org) Sun, 6 Apr 2003 19:15:00 GMT

>

> "Rich Clark, aka Left Rev Egg Plant, ULC, CotSG" (spammers_...@rrclark.net) Mon, 12 Mar 2007 09:05:17 -0400

>

> scott...@my-dejanews.com (7i40rq$182$1...@nnrp1.deja.com)

>

> iris...@aol.com (Iris Cohen) 22 Nov 2000 01:14:09 GMT

>

> con...@tiac.net (Harry H Conover)

>

> "Roger Coppock" (rcopp...@adnc.com) 25 Jun 2006 12:57:31 -0700

>

> "gcouger" (gco...@NoXSPAM.mercury.rfdata.net)
G. C. Couger gco...@couger.com Stillwater, OK Tue, 5 Sep 2000 05:10:40 -0500

>

> Ken Cox (k...@lucent.com) (35ABA6...@research.bell-labs.com)

>

> dalt...@my-dejanews.com (6ubq9s$b2i$1...@nnrp1.dejanews.com)
NNTP-Posting-Host: 136.1.1.18

>

> "dangrdoc" (dang...@sound.net) (vYFN6#H98G...@news.kc1.net)

>

> "Nathaniel J. Daniels" (m00...@nadn.navy.mil)

>

> "Peter T. Daniels" (gram...@worldnet.att.net)

>

> From: DaRkSuN (Dar...@brew-master.com) (32F60F...@brew-master.com)
NNTP-Posting-Host: murd-bp-126.dartmouth.edu

>

> ia...@stt.win-uk.net (Iain Davidson) 31 Mar 2005 17:05:20 -0800

>

> "Carl Dean" (cde...@mindspring.com)

>

> James E. (Jed) Decobert j...@BATES.MIT.EDU

>

> zo...@banneker.Stanford.EDU (Craig DeForest)

>

> d...@panacea.phys.utk.edu (David DeLaney)

>

> Joe Dellinger's http://sepwww.stanford.edu/oldsep/joe/segecreport.html

>

> Craig Dickson c...@netcom.com Sat Jun 25 00:44:05 1994

>

> "John M. Dollan" (dol...@mcn.net)

>

> Glenn Dowdy (glenn...@hp.com)


>

> PD (thedraperfam...@gmail.com)
Tue, 16Aug 2011 12:49:11 -0500

>

> "Alan M.Dunsmuir"(al...@moonrake.demon.co.uk)

>

> egg...@sydney.dialix.oz (Greig Ebeling)
(35f684d7...@fermi.dialix.com.au)
nsw.nnrp.telstra.net 905348938 203.12.7.9

>

> Dr. Michael W. Ecker Editor & Publisher Recreational & Educational Computing
Clarks Summit, PA 18411 Mathematics Dep't Pennsylvania State Univ.
Wilkes-Barre Campus

>

> shmo...@webtv.net (Lamarr Edwards) Sat, 10 Nov 2001 20:59:22 -0700 (MST)

>

> Eeyore (rabbitsfriendsandrelati...@REMOVETHIS.hotmail.com) Fri, 11 Aug 2006 21:09:39 +0100
Graham

>

> "Phlip" (s...@web.page) (7o0e63$n...@chronicle.concentric.net)
NNTP-Posting-Host: tegan.deltanet.com //users.deltanet.com/~tegan/home.html

>

> Ehheh (Wikipedia editor) 216.16.54.147 17:31, 12 May 2007 (UTC)

>

> Daniel.E...@nau.edu

>

> Revision as of 05:19, 6 May 2009 (view source)
Paine Ellsworth (talk | contribs)
(→External links: add ext. link)
[http://rationalwiki.com/wiki/List_of_Internet_Kooks Rationalwiki's List of Internet Kooks]

>

> 06:05, 10 April 2007 David Eppstein (Talk | contribs) m (revert psychoceramic) Wikipedia page on Euclid Infinitude of Primes Proof

>

> bi...@lenteract.com (Chris) (7h9jgo$30u$1...@eve.enteract.com)
(6e97jh$m...@eve.enteract.com)

>

> (364346...@erols.com)
X-Complaints-To: ab...@rcn.com

>

> Patrick Van Esch
http://www.iihe.ac.be/hep/pp/vanesch
mail: vane...@dice2.desy.de
for PGP public key: finger vane...@dice2.desy.de

>

> Dan Evens (dane...@aracnet.net)

>

> dev...@uoguelph.ca (David L Evens)

>

> spam from Ed Falk
w/w/w.rahul.net/falk/AP/

>

> www Mark Felps ~jmfelps

>

> mferg...@aol.com (MFergerson) Mark Fergerson (mferg...@home.com)

>

> (fie...@eecs.umich.edu) (Matthew H. Fields)

>

> "Ben Flieger" (a...@primenet.removethis.com)

>

> wfo...@wmconnect.com (Bill Foley) 23 Jun 2002 18:43:05 -0700

>

> for...@mth.msu.edu (Brendan Foreman)

>

> fos...@fp.co.nzNOSPAM (Geoff Foster) (679vmv$ms1$1...@wolfman.xtra.co.nz)

>

> (oF60Hc...@alcyone.darkside.com)
m...@alcyone.darkside.com (Erik Max Francis)
w-w-w.crank.net/usenet.html
cranks, crackpots, kooks and loons on the net
Last update 2006 Sep 29
(a 7 sisters production | created by Erik Max Francis | powered by
GNU m4 )
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San Jose, CA, USA
Sat, 24 Mar 2007 18:52:27 -0700

>

> m...@Radix.Net (Ted Frank)

>

> Chris Franks (cfr...@nospam.sc.hp.com)
Organization: Hewlett Packard

>

> stuart...@sunderland.ac.uk (Stu Fraser)

>

> in...@simple-line.de (Franz Fritsche) Wed, 01 May 2002 14:03:19 GMT

>

> Cliff Frost (cl...@ack.Berkeley.EDU) (8jbn28$hmq$1...@agate.berkeley.edu)

>

> Newsgroups: sci.math
Date: Fri, 13 Oct 2017 10:11:29 -0700 (PDT)
NNTP-Posting-Host: 96.249.224.11
From: John Gabriel <thenewc...@gmail.com>

>

> cyn...@greenville.infi.net (Darren Garrison) Dar...@cris.com

>

> "steve gibbs" (tib...@blueyonder.co.uk)
(S%p2c.2728$0l3....@news-binary.blueyonder.co.uk)

>

> Eric Gisin (g...@uniserve.com) Sat, 9 Jun 2007 18:28:19 -0700

>

> Eric Gisse (kseggR...@uas.alaska.edu) 18 Mar 2007 06:57:42 -0700
(likely Wizard of Oz)
>

> Matt Giwer (jul...@tampabay.REMover.rr.com) Sun, 19 Mar 2006 05:42:58 GMT
forgers Matt Giwer and hobbit@southern_seaweed.com.op under the name Mountain Man

>

> Pete Goudreau (gou...@SPAMmac.com) (01HW.B4E48CDD0...@news.earthlink.net)

>

> Michael Groszek (mi...@dingoblue.net.au) Sun, 19 Aug 2001 02:59:10 +1000

>

> Jerry Grushow (sta...@pilot.infi.net)

>

> Guardian (newspaper) Toby Howard, Andrew Bulhak, Donna Kossy The Guardian, July 1997

>

> Jacques Guy (jg...@guess.where) Sun, 29 Sep 2002 05:13:56 -0700

>

> Fred Hall Mon Mar 08, 2010 4:33 pm

>

> Feb 13, 2004 by Jacob W. Haller , w-w-w.jwgh.org/ark/articles/archieparody.html

>

> George Hammond (gham...@mediaone.net) Wed, 04 Apr 2001 21:47:12 GMT

>

> vm...@frii.com (Virgil Hancher)

>

> Martin Hannigan Aug 8, 8:58 pm

>

> "hanson" (han...@quick.net) Wed, 27 Sep 2006 21:49:42 GMT
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NNTP-Posting-Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2006 17:49:42 EDT
>

> (1993Nov8.0...@usage.csd.unsw.OZ.AU)
deg...@hydra.maths.unsw.EDU.AU Dave Hare

>

> Path: l9ni11715pbj.0!nntp.google.com!news1.google.com!postnews.google.com!glegroupsg2000goo.googlegroups.com!not-for-mail
From: larryhar...@softhome.net
Newsgroups: sci.physics.electromag
Subject: Flagging posts fairly in sci.physic.electromag
Date: Sat, 14 Jul 2012 14:29:00 -0700 (PDT)
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Larry Harson <larryhar...@softhome.net>
Date: Sun, 30 Sep 2012 11:56:27 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Sun, Sep 30 2012 1:56 pm

>

> DLH...@ukcc.uky.edu (dlharm1) David Harmon

>

> Kevin Filan, Webmaster ://www.ultinet.net/~harwer/flames.htm
Kenaz Filan (mrha...@excite.SPAMBGONE.com) Thu, 26 Jul 2007 22:21:57 GMT

>

> har...@indyvax.iupui.edu (James Harvey)

>

> Josh Hayes, moderator, sci.bio.evolution

>

> herbzet (herb...@gmail.com) Thu, 23 Apr 2009 23:34:04 -0400

>

> heth...@math.wisc.edu (Brent Hetherwick)

>

> "franz heymann" Wed, 12 Dec 2001 20:08:48 -0000

>

> Damon Hill (damon1S...@comcast.netnet) Mon, 25 Jun 2007 00:33:35 -0500

>

> Chris Hillman (hil...@math.washington.edu)
(Pine.OSF.4.02A.99091...@goedel1.math.washington.edu)

>

> Stephen Holland (hol...@cleaner1.obs.aau.dk)

>

> 10:05, 3 July 2009 Gandalf61 (talk | contribs) (11,216 bytes) (rv unsourced nonsense)
Wikipedia editor
>

> gan...@digital.net - Ken Hollis O-

>

> Honerkamp, Robbie (RH660) rob...@SHORTY.COM

>

> "Reggie" (in...@hotmail.com) (6qd95i$a53$1...@nntp2.ba.best.com)
NNTP-Posting-Host: 206.14.159.11

>

> Toby Howard, Andrew Bulhak, www.vhemt.org/reviews, March 2006

>

> Jonathan Hoyle (Jonatha...@kodak.com) (394535...@kodak.com)

>

> Ken P. Hreikin (pseudoname for a local)

>

> "Hoffman, Nick N" (Hoffman...@NOSPAMbhp.com.au)

>

> blair[no spam]@world.std.com (Blair P. Houghton) Sat, 21 Sep 2002 05:55:10 GMT

>

> Sat, 11 Nov 2000 16:35:53 -0500
James Hunter (James....@Jhuapl.edu)
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab, Laurel, MD, USA

>

> Brian Quincy Hutchings, Jan 23, 2007 1:16 pm
Brian Q Hutchings 2004
Posting Host 164.67.44.221

>

> T. Eliot, Top Bard. jaco...@oucsace.cs.ohiou.edu

>

> http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/~toby/writing/Guardian/ceramics.htm
The Guardian, July 1997
Andrew Bulhak, Donna Kossy, Toby Howard

>

> sci.math, Jun 12, 2008 by Jesse F. Hughes
Jesse Hughes, an adjunct professor of philosophy, at Bennett College
and Salem State
College in Arlington Mass (according to Argus Leader newspaper
29JUN08) Bentley University, error by Argus
>

> "c.jefford" (c.je...@virgin.net) NNTP-Posting-Host: 194.168.124.87

>

> Joe Jefferson (jjst...@primenet.com) Fri, 14 Jul 2000 21:07:36 -0700

>

> dje...@my-dejanews.com (My China Blue Heaven)
(djenny-1607...@ppp-206-170-2-78.sntc01.pacbell.net)

>

> kluto (tommyr...@gmail.com)
Date: Mon, 30 May 2011 04:26:53 -0700 (PDT)

>

> c...@lfn.org (Craig Johnston) (87cipa$16pi$1...@junkie.gnofn.org)

>

> engs...@sable.ox.ac.uk (Ian Johnston)
Organization: Oxford University, England

>

> ejon...@concentric.net (Earle Jones)

>

> ja...@rhyolite.win-uk.net (John Jones)
"John Jones" (jonescard...@aol.com) 2 Mar 2007 01:23:19 -0800
jonescardif_@_tinternet.com

>

> "David Lloyd-Jones" (6t8S4.38558$Xk2.1...@tor-nn1.netcom.ca)

>

> adamk (ad...@adamk.net) Sun, 23Aug2009, 03:53:08 EDT
tr22g12.aset.psu.edu

Path: g2news1.google.com!news2.google.com!news1.google.com!news.glorb.com!news2.glorb.com!tr22g12.aset.psu.edu!news.mathforum.org!not-for-mail
From: adamk <ad...@adamk.net>
Date: Sun, 02 Jan 2011 02:02:30 EST

>

> "EPK" (kv...@purdue.edu> Wed, 20 Dec 2000 11:51:52 -0500

>

> David Kastrup d...@pool.informatik.rwth-aachen.de
Tel: +49-241-72419 Fax: +49-241-79502
Goethestr. 20, D-52064 Aachen

>

> Bill Keller prayer...@liveprayer.com
prayer...@liveprayer.com
dailyde...@list.flanet.com (Daily Devotional From LivePrayer)
(flanet.com's address is: PNG Corporation, 7431 114th Avenue N., Largo, FL
34643, USA)
Registrant:
B K MEDIA (LIVEPRAYER-DOM)
111 TRAVELERS WAY NORTH
ST PETERSBURG, FL 33710

>

> "Don Kelly" (d...@shaw.ca) Sat, 14 Jul 2007 23:33:57 GMT

>

> tah...@usa.TAKETHISOUT.net (Phoenix) David Kendrick

>

> Lynn Killingbeck (kill...@pointecom.net) Mon, 22 Apr 2002 18:41:53 GMT

>

> hkil...@osf1.gmu.edu (HENRY E. KILPATRICK JR.) (7do91s$l...@portal.gmu.edu)

>

> kim...@couriernet.infi.ne

>

> Steven T. Kirsch, Harry M. Motro of Infoseek

>

> Jason Kodish jkod...@thwap.ve6mgs.ampr.ab.ca (Jason Kodish) Jun 26 1995, 1:00 am

>

> ttp : / / butterfly.net/obvious/kooks.html

>

> kooks, alt.usenet.kooks Andy Beckwith, Paul Bernhardt,
Harvey J. Cohen, Cousens, John Davis, Stuart Fraser
Gary Frazier, Andrew Haley, Robert Hatcher, Macabrus
William Mullin, Norman Nithman, Kevin Podsiadlik
John M. Price, Russ Price, Dave Ratcliffe, Don Root
Tim Tulley, USSMontana, Peter Vorobieff, Zepp

>

> Donna J. Kossy www.teleport.com

>

> Roman A Kresinski (r.a.kr...@staffs.ac.uk)

>

> Georg Kreyerhoff (ge...@physik.rwth-aachen.de)

>

> "Michael Kuettner" (mik...@eunet.at) Wed, 28 Feb 2007 00:28:15 +0100

>

> "Tom Kunich" (tku...@cadence.com) Fri, 2 Feb 2001 11:09:23 -0800

>

> ku...@unm.edu (Robert James Kunkle)

>

> Labor Poster Services
5859 West Saginaw Hwy
Suite 343
Lansing, MI 48197
Caller: Labor Poster Services
Call Type: Telemarketer 1-888-202-1283


>

> ri...@vax2.concordia.ca (Rich Lafferty)

>

> http://www.slate.com/Economics/99-09-15/Economics.asp
By Steven E. Landsburg

>

> Bryon Lape (bl...@grey-net.com) Tue, 11 Jul 2000 00:42:23 GMT

>

> nos...@sexzilla.net (Lionel Lauer) (3531ae05...@enews.newsguy.com)
b...@newsguy.com j...@newsguy.com

>

> JeffL...@WorldNet.att.net (Jeffery J. Leader)
JeffL...@MindSpring.com (Jeffery J. Leader)
old....@mindspring.com (Old Salt)
!worldnet.att.net!newsadm
From: old....@att.net (Old Salt) (6e6k84$q...@bgtnsc02.worldnet.att.net)
rradi...@mmindspring.com (radiospace)


>

> (1994Feb23.1...@rat.csc.calpoly.edu)
jp...@galaxy.csc.calpoly.edu (Jason Lee)

>

> Jul 25 2000 by Dean Lenort

>

> "Leste" (jle...@hotmail.com) (7jdsnp$36a$0...@208.10.1.51)

>

> mark...@earthlink.net (Mark D Lew) Thu, 13 Sep 2001 12:35:25 GMT

>

> Keith Little (kli...@bridge.com)
NNTP-Posting-Host: 167.76.15.205

>

> ro...@tlerll.earthlink.net (Tlerll)

>

> psu0...@odin.cc.pdx.edu (Jon LeVitre) Portland State University

>

> "Psychopaths News Service" (RayLope...@evilfucker.com) 25 Jun 2006 13:45:55 -0700

>

> Eric Lucas (aea...@peabody.sct.ucarb.com)

>

> Carl J Lydick | INTERnet: C...@SOL1.GPS.CALTECH.EDU | NSI/HEPnet: SOL1::CARL

>

> Robert Maas, Wed, Dec 27 2006 11:02 am

>

> redirect Talk:Usenet celebrity/Archive → Talk:Usenet
celebrity/Archive 1. DMacks (talk) 17:56, 13 May 2009 (UTC)
Wikipedia editor DMacks redirect to David D'Amato

>

> rmac...@alphalink.com.au (Ross Macfarlane) 13 May 2004 23:01:52 -0700

>

> Makouli (mcl...@skypoint.com) (88192g$b00$1...@nnrp1.deja.com)

>

> mmal...@netcom.com (Mark Mallory)

>

> "Old Man" (nom...@nomail.net) Sun, 8 Sep 2002 21:38:35 -0500
NNTP-Posting-Host: 216.16.20.27

>

> Spacebanter website: Anthony Mandic, March 27th, 2004, 07:56 PM external usenet poster


> Joe Manfre (man...@flash.net) 2000-08-27 18:40:40 PST

>

> Jim Manson (J...@Manson.com)

>

> # 16:53, 28 September 2008 Manticore (Talk | contribs) m (Protected "Archimedes Plutonium": wah wah wah [edit=autoconfirmed:move=autoconfirmed] (expires 16:53, 5 October 2008 (UTC)))
# (cur) (last) 16:52, 28 September 2008 Manticore (Talk | contribs) m (3,252 bytes) (Reverted edit(s) of 216.16.57.199 (talk) to last version by Sycamore) Wikipedia Uncyclopedia

>

> "Marvin Margoshes" (phys...@earthlink.net)

>

> Mark (nots...@--.com)
X-Complaints-To: ab...@verizon.net
X-Trace: trnddc06 1159061730 71.252.11.79 (Sat, 23 Sep 2006 21:35:30 EDT)

>

> Jack Markan
MoeBlee (jazzm...@hotmail.com) Fri, 8 May 2009 15:19:43 -0700 (PDT)

>

> "Maury Markowitz" (maury@remove_this.sympatico.ca.invalid)
Fri, 08 Dec 2000 16:41:03 GMT

>

> Math1723 <anonym1...@aol.com>
Wed, 12 Jan 2011 12:44:53 -0800 (PST)

>

> rake...@cats.ucsc.edu (Jesse Matonak)

>

> "Bob May" (bob...@access1.net)

>

> /www.angelfire.com /la/ carlos may/Archie.html

>

> jmcc...@sun1307.spd.dsccc.com (Mike McCarty)
(6t6ukk$2sk$1...@relay1.dsccc.com)

>

> mensa...@aol.compost Dec 20, 2:02 pm , 2006

>

> Richard Mentock (men...@mindspring.com)

>

> Fluffy (8790nii...@fluffy.meow.org)

>

> Barry Merriman
UCLA Dept. of Math
UCLA Inst. for Fusion and Plasma Research
b...@math.ucla.edu (Internet; NeXTMail is welcome)

>

> TransWench (popesna...@meow.org)
Date: Sat, 24 Feb 2007 09:39:59 GMT
Local: Sat, Feb 24 2007 3:39 am

>

> Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz (spam...@library.lspace.org)
Thu, 15 Mar 2007 12:55:08 -0500
Path: s3ni38362qas.0!nntp.google.com!Xl.tags.giganews.com!border1.nntp.dca.giganews.com!nntp.giganews.com!local2.nntp.dca.giganews.com!nntp.posted.lerostechnologies!news.posted.lerostechnologies.POSTED!not-for-mail
NNTP-Posting-Date: Thu, 27 Feb 2014 18:53:31 -0600
Newsgroups: sci.math
From: Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz <spam...@library.lspace.org.invalid>

>

> robrp...@aol.com Internet (RobRPM2222) Rob Meyer
(19990802024354...@ng-cd1.aol.com)

>

> ami...@tisl.ukans.edu (Adam Miller)

>

> "oilinfo" (.) (6sgrb8$ora$1...@camel19.mindspring.com)
NNTP-Posting-Host: pool-207-205-163-176.nwrk.grid.net LOL

>

> Oct 20 2005 by Sean Monaghan

>

> moro...@world.std.com (Michael Moroney) Tue, 28 Sep 1993 04:45:50 GMT

>

> MySpace.com -Oct 7, 2007 www
profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction>user.viewprofile&friendID>118852684 - 77k -

MySpace profile for --Archimedes Plutonium-- with pictures, videos,
personal blog, interests, information about me and more.
profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?
fuseaction>user.viewprofile&friendID>118852684 - 62k -
18Aug08

Rupert Murdoch, Tom Anderson, Chris DeWolfe

>

> nate...@leland.Stanford.EDU (Douglas Natelson)

>

> sci.math, Feb 14, 2008, by Neilist, latto...@gmail.com

>

> Greg Neill, HNSX Supercomputers Inc.
Greg Neill (yne...@atlas.cmc.ec.gc.ca) (Q8_V2.354$7z2....@carnaval.risq.qc.ca)

>

> "Peter Nelson" (5XDy3.3535$Sg4....@wbnws01.ne.mediaone.net)

>

> Bill Nelson (89no1u$5g4$1...@bashir.peak.org)

>

> Herbert Newman (nomail@invalid) Thu, 23 Apr 2009 22:05:06 +0200 G. Frege
G. Frege, Tue, 24 Apr 2007 21:18:13 +0200

>

> Martin Nicholson (mar...@madscientist.demon.co.uk)
Tue, 28 Aug 2001 20:08:57 +0100

>

> sn...@animal.blarg.net (Louis Nick III)

>

> Normy (no...@eisa.net.au) NNTP-Posting-Host: 172.73.19.91

>

> le...@name.netinc.ca (RPP)

>

> bspag...@hotmail.com (Clueless Wombat Cabal)
(6lh1gq$jkm$4...@leol.net-link.net)

>

> Greglocock 04:14, 14 May 2007 (UTC) Wikipedia editor

>

> "Psychopaths News Service" (RayLopez99@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: 25 Jun 2006 13:45:55 -0700

>

> 20:56, 24 September 2008 Scott MacDonald , Wikipedia editor

>

> Newsgroups: sci.math
Date: Thu, 3 May 2018 01:05:19 -0700 (PDT)
In-Reply-To: <29d267b0-3800-49ca...@googlegroups.com>
Complaints-To: groups...@google.com
Injection-Info: glegroupsg2000goo.googlegroups.com; posting-host=155.4.130.203;
posting-account=9KdpAQoAAAAHk6UQCkS1dsKOLsVDFEUN
NNTP-Posting-Host: 155.4.130.203

From: Zelos Malum <zelos...@gmail.com>
Injection-Date: Thu, 03 May 2018 08:05:20 +0000


>

> Martin Musatov (marty.musa...@gmail.com) Fri, 5 Jun 2009 12:17:54 -0700 (PDT)

>

> jacob navia (ja...@spamsink.net) Wed, 11 May 2011 20:10:32 +0200

>

> From: konyberg (konyb...@online.no)
Date: Tue, 6 Sep 2011 07:09:47 -0700 (PDT)
>

> Bob Officer (bobmunge...@earthlink.net) Sun, 21 Mar 2004 15:54:52 -0800
(inas50tf47evtg0it...@4ax.com)

>

> (42lnf2$b...@newsbf02.news.aol.com>
dinog...@aol.com (Dinogeorge) George Olshevsky

>

> "Markettruth" (mktt...@optonline.net)
(1bNH5.121933$4d.17...@news02.optonline.net)
news02.optonline.net 972005181 24.191.70.162 (Thu, 19 Oct 2000 21:26:21 EDT)


>

> Art Deco, (Carl Osterwald), Sat, Oct 28 2006 4:59 pm Art Deco (e...@netcabal.com)

>

> (O...@upthorpe.demon.co.uk) (Y2tTgAAz...@upthorpe.demon.co.uk)

>

> David Pacheco (david_...@lineone.net)

>

> lpa...@nassau.cv.net (35e2d43a...@news.erols.com)

>

> Thomas Pain Fri, 05 Jul 2002 14:43:05 GMT 68.4.32.19 @cox.net

>

> Message-ID: (369ea...@news3.paonline.com)
Path: dartvax.dartmouth.edu!news.bu.edu!uunet!in5.uu.net!falcon.america.net!
sunqbc.risq.qc.ca!newsfeed.cwix.com!204.210.251.99!storm.twcol.com!
dca1-feed3.news.digex.net!digex!news3.paonline.com!198.69.90.45

>

> (34ff91ef....@enews.newsguy.com)
par...@thenest.org ("Iron Parrot" JIIM)

>

> (T...@NSA.sucks) Information Security Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC
(6leu91$7...@news1.panix.com)

>

> David Parker Sun, Jan 21 2007 2:06 am

>

> lpar...@emory.edu (Lloyd Parker) 29 Jul 2005 15:18:00 GMT

>

> (kibo-23019...@ppp0a020.std.com) ki...@world.std.com (James "Kibo" Parry)

>

> a...@world.std.com (AJ) Mon, 28 Mar 2005 20:09:53 +0000 (UTC)

>

> person or persons of h---://---.casualsexblog.com/-/google.com/search?num>30&hl>en&scoring>d&as_drrb>q&q>archimedes+plutonium&as_qdr>w&btnG>Google+Search&lr>&sa>N&tab>gw
noted 5 May 05; leave out ttp and www

>

> pe...@accessone.com (David Petry) (6t95ur$q07$1...@supernews.com)

>

> 12:35, 18 September 2006 Mike Peel (Talk | contribs) (Nominated for deletion - see Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Archimedes Plutonium)

>

> J. Antonio Perez M., Jan 22, 2007 1:33 AM, Tonicop_@_ahoo.com , Tonio

>

> From: Pfss...@aol.com
Date: Wed, 10 Aug 2011 08:19:53 -0500
Organization: Aioe.org NNTP Server

>

> Peter E. Pflaum Ph.D. , Headmaster

>

> DANIEL J. PHELPS (173FF1498DS...@ukcc.uky.edu)

>

> Mike Philbin (Mike_P...@scee.sony.co.uk)

>

> Teg Pipes (t...@fruitfly.berkeley.edu)

>

> "Darrell Plank" (darr...@suckerpunch.com)
(6tab04$ktj$1...@brokaw.wa.com)

>

> S Platt (SPl...@mail.delcoelect.com)

>

> Mark Plonsky, Ph.D. (mplo...@worf.uwsp.edu)

>

> ran...@visionplace.com (Randy Poe) Fri, 12 Jan 2001 17:09:24 GMT

>

> David James Polewka (imb...@mindspring.com)
Tue, 11 Mar 2003 09:37:02 GMT

>

> Chris Pollard (cpol...@teal.csn.net)

>

> (2s7ofd$e...@knot.queensu.ca)
pol...@chem.queensu.ca (Joel Polowin)
>

> "porky_pig...@my-deja.com" (porky_pig...@my-deja.com) Sat, 10 May 2008 10:53:54 -0700 (PDT)

>

> DrPostman (Lo...@mysig.foremail) Tue, 06 Jan 2004 15:36:13 GMT

>

> Robert Andrew Powell, NPR radio, John Baez
a journalist time 31:02.
http://www.thislife.org/ra/293 .ram

>

> Gordon D. Pusch 18 Jun 2000 14:07:55 -0500

>

> Ed Price (edp...@pacbell.net)

>

> ger...@indigo.ie (Gerry Quinn)

>


> Fri, 31 Dec 2010 20:18:00 -0600
From: quasi (qu...@null.set)

Path: lh20ni198578pbb.0!nntp.google.com!news2.google.com!news1.google.com!Xl.tags.giganews.com!border1.nntp.dca.giganews.com!nntp.giganews.com!local2.nntp.dca.giganews.com!news.giganews.com.POSTED!not-for-mail
NNTP-Posting-Date: Wed, 18 Jan 2012 23:09:14 -0600
From: quasi <qu...@null.set>

>

> Ken Quirici, 6 Mar 2006 11:06:28 -0800

>

> Mike Ranger (mra...@cadvision.com) Mike Ranger GeoConsulting Calgary, Alberta

>

> da...@frackit.com (Dave Ratcliffe)

>

> "Raziel" (m...@vrwc.org) Thu, 21 Jun 2001 12:32:54 -0700
University of Washington

>

> go...@wilhelp.com (Al Reet) (34f537f0...@news.sunderland.ac.uk)

>

> Jeff…Relf (Jeff_R...@Yahoo.COM) 21 Mar 2007 13:21:31 GMT

>

> Mark Richardson m.richard...@utas.edu.au

>

> Thomas M Richardson (tric...@ionet.net)

>

> Fred Rickey ric...@math.bgsu.edu www.bgsu.edu/~vrickey/
h t t p:/ernie.bgsu.edu/~vrickey/math311/web-quality.
Fred Rickey

>

> ttp:w4.lns.cornell.edu/~riehle/crank.htm

>

> David Ritz (dritz+hfr...@mindspring.com) Sat, 22 Mar 2008 17:00:38 -0500

>

> Peter J Ross <p...@example.invalid>
Date: Wed, 15 Feb 2012 20:33:01 +0000 (UTC)

>

> Bill Rowe (bjr...@earthlink.net) Tue, 15 Jan 2002 03:53:09 GMT

>

> rr...@sirius.com (R. Russ) Ray Russ

>

> (822935...@antigrav.demon.co.uk) Colin F. Russ

>

> "MHS" (m...@sound.id) Sun, 5 Aug 2007 10:45:15 -0700

>

> Zik Saleeba z...@zikzak.net

>

> "Sam" (sam...@dpinc.ml.org) Sam Varshavchik geocities.com
"Sam" (1999043000323...@email-scan.webcircle.com)

>

> Massimo Sandal, Italy
Archimedes Plutonium - Devicerandom
wiki.devicerandom.org/Archimedes_Plutonium

◦ Cached

Jan 23, 2011 - This is a copy of the now-deleted Wikipedia article on Archimedes Plutonium, a known USENET celebrity and crackpot extraordinaire.

>

> Armondikov
Archimedes Plutonium | Spherical Bullshit
sphericalbullshit.wordpress.com/2013/02/06/archimedes-plutonium/

◦ Cached

Feb 6, 2013 - Via PsyGremlin via PZ Myers, this is Archimedes Plutonium, my new favourite crank hat. I was really fucking surprised to have taken this long to ...

>

> pau...@electra.saaf.se (Paul Schlyter)

>

> Alan M. Schwartz (che...@uvic.ca) Uncle Al (Uncl...@ix.netcom.com)
uncl...@ix.netcom.com, Uncl...@ix.netcom.com

[
[ Name: Schwartz, Alan
[ Country: USA
[ Residential Address: SANTA ANA, CA 92705
[ Map: http://www.mapquest.com/maps/map.adp?country=US&countryid=250&addtohistory=&address=&city=SANTA+ANA&state=CA&zipcode=92705&submit=Get+Map
[ Postal Address:
[ Alan Schwartz
[ 49 Fabriano
[ P.O. Box 005
[ Irvine, CA 92620-2525
[ E-mail(s): uncl...@ix.netcom.com, Uncl...@ix.netcom.com
[ Tel: 714-771-2526 (+1 714 771 2526 for international callers)
[ Spouse: Jackie Schwartz
[ Spouse Occupation: Para-legal
[ Spouse workplace: <pending disclosure>


>

> Barbara Schwarz 2006 Aug 25, 12:01 pm

>

> scot...@soda.CSUA.Berkeley.EDU (Ben Scott) (7od3im$1k22$1...@nntprelay.berkeley.edu)

>

> Dr B Scott, Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik
e-mail: b...@ipp-garching.mpg.de http://www.rzg.mpg.de/~bds/home.html

>

> Thomas R Scudder @umich.edu

>

> "D. C. & M. V. Sessions" (sess...@primenet.com)

>

> "Leo Sgouros" (lsgo...@tampabay.rr.com)

>

> sha...@phenxa.physics.wisc.edu

>

> "Clifton T. Sharp Jr." (agen...@spambusters.ml.org)
(cli...@megsinet.net)

>

> k...@compinnovations.com (Ken Shaw)

>

> (43nff7$3...@newsstand.cit.cornell.edu>
shoc...@newton.ruph.cornell.edu (Paul Shocklee)

>

> "Vagor" (dave...@worldnet.att.net)
NNTP-Posting-Host: 12.72.5.139

>

> robert_silver...@raytheon.com Tues, Jul 25 2006 2:13 pm

>

> bruce.s...@NOSPAMagresearch.NOTco.NOTnz (Bruce Sinclair)
Mon, 22 Sep 2003 00:06:02 GMT

>

> Tim Skirvin ttp://www.math.uiuc.edu/~tskirvin/
Margie Skirvin, parents of one USA's worst spoiled brats
Robert M. Skirvin ski...@uiuc.edu

>

> em...@antispammed.see.ic.web.page (Roland Smith) Imperial College

>

> Tim Smith t...@halcyon.com

>

> Bill Snyder (bsn...@iadfw.net) Fri, 02 Feb 2001 19:27:17 -0600

>

> jspencer (jspe...@my-dejanews.com)
(Jeffrey.C....@alum.dartmouth.org)

>

> rspi...@acs.ucalgary.ca (Richard Spinney)

>

> Kent & Kat ks...@sprynet.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: hil-dnppm-049.oh.compuserve.net

>

> Andrew Stephenson (am...@deltrak.demon.co.uk) (822926...@deltrak.demon.co.uk)

>

> lowrys& (Lowry Stiles) lowrys&sp...@hotmail.com
"MacFadden" (ne...@aol.com) (01bd657d$78b4e3c0$789f0ece@freddies)
"Arnold The Paperboy"
burn...@aol.com (Burntcake)
webg...@aol.com (Web Genius) Amiga computers
stl...@aol.com (STL137) NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder03.news.aol.com
"MacGiggle" (theresal...@hotmail.com)
(3664227d$0$1...@nntp1.ba.best.com)

>

> "Ian St. John" (ist...@spamcop.net) Fri, 17 Aug 2001 15:18:33 -0400
Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)

>

> Marshall Spight 2009, Dec 1, 8:58 am
Marshall Spight
Location:
California, USA
Industry:
Technology
Email address:
marshall.spi...@gmail.com

>

> donstockba...@hotmail.com (Don Stockbauer) 16 Sep 2005 20:28:25 -0700

>

> Michael Straight (stra...@email.unc.edu)
(Pine.A41.3.95L.980505...@login6.isis.unc.edu)

>

> fl_a...@hotmail.com (I R A Aggie) stri...@met.fsu.edu
(stricherz-050...@news.fsu.edu)
sy_n...@gurcragntba.pbz (I R A Darth Aggie)

>

> Jens Stueckelberger (JStueckelber...@nowhere.org) Sun, 21 Jun 2009 15:29:54 +0000 (UTC)

>

> ://world.std.com/~asuter/ asu...@leland.Stanford.EDU (Alex Suter)

>

> Robert Synott: Archimedes Plutonium is no more! Jun 25, 2007 ... Archimedes Plutonium (allegedly his legal name), a noted Internet mad person, has been excised from Wikipedia. After two unsuccessful votes ... 3. myblog.rsynnott.com/2007/.../archimedes-plutonium-is-no-more

> -ww.painttalk.com/f14/flame-wars-7371/
Daniel Tambasco
Painting MA
978-749-9808

>

> Karlo Takki (kta...@artcrime.com) 1998/05/31

>

> Mark Tarka (mark...@mcn.net) (397C0D...@mcn.net)

>

> Bill Taylor (mat...@math.canterbury.ac.nz)

>

> k...@yt.invalid (Louis Theran)
(slrn6eoo...@ren.camb.opengroup.org)

>

> ices...@spambusters.ml.org (Rich Tietjens, (6o99kb$26k...@spambusters.ml.org)

>

> "Felix E. Tilley Jr." (fti...@indirect.com)

>

> "Frank Tipler" (howardj...@yahoo.com) 7 May 2006 22:13:59 -0700

>

> daak...@ix.netcom.com (Carmen Toledo) 1996/06/28

>

> "master1729" <tommy1...@clownpenis.fart>
Date: Fri, 21 Jan 2011 16:34:49 -0800

>

> rtotman@(remove.this)oanet.com

>

> "Gardner S. Trask III" (tr...@shore.net)

>

> Rich Travsky (traR...@hotmMOVEail.com) Mon, 20 Dec 2004 22:38:07 -0700

>

> David R Tribble (da...@tribble.com) Fri, 14 Dec 2007 18:19:16 -0800 (PST)
2010, Aug 30, 9:10 pm "But I'll be the one to say it:
AP is a crank, and his definition of 10^500 as an infinite
number is a crank idea, just like all of his other ideas. "

>

> Steve Turner (srtu...@spamnet.att.net) Fri, 23 Jan 2004 23:20:17 GMT

>

> tu...@wente.llnl.gov (Teresa Tutt)

>

> h t t p:/mineral.umd.edu/usenet/soc.culture.austria/0049.htm

>

> htt/www.astro.utoronto.ca/~nott/krack/kosmo_link.ht

>

> (389B0262...@math.okstate.edu)
David C. Ullrich (ull...@math.okstate.edu)

>

> 10:28, 24 May 2007 Uncle G, Wikipedia editor

>

> "Dirk Van de moortel" (a9wR7.3434$jf1...@afrodite.telenet-ops.be)
Wed, 12 Dec 2001 18:25:50 GMT

>

> "Alex Vange" (va...@i1.net) (01bfe21e$53e0c940$d230e6cf@default)

>

> Michael Varney (varney@colorado_no_spam.edu)

>

> "Marc Verhaegen" (fa20...@skynet.be) Thu, 6 Feb 2003 23:55:10 +0100

>

> b...@uclink2.berkeley.edu (Ben Waggoner)

>

> jwar...@mchsi.com  jerry warner 2009, Nov 5, 10:34 pm

>

> June 29, 2002
Publication: Rutland Herald (VT)
By HARRY R. WEBER The Associated Press CONCORD, N.H.

>

> "Jim Webster" (j...@websterpagebank.spam.freeserve.co.uk)

>

> bigd...@aol.comGetaGrip (Bigdakine) 13 Jan 2004 02:06:34 GMT
Dr. Stuart A. Weinstein

>

> joh...@vulcan.xs4all.nl (Johan Wevers)

>

>(17upRNAA...@wharton.demon.co.uk) Peter (Pe...@wharton.demon.co.uk+)

>

> M...@whatever.com (390C2F84...@whatever.com)

>

> # 03:40, 4 May 2005 Kelly Martin m (rv vandalism from 24.150.133.35) wikipedia vandalism
# 18:39, 26 April 2005 198.85.217.52 (wikipedia vandalism)
# 15:24, 13 April 2005 Jcmo (wikipedia vandalism)

>

> Roger Williams (rog...@shell1.tiac.net) (6klmlq$2...@enews4.newsguy.com)

>

> Theresa Willis (twi...@sound.net)

>

> www Patrick Wojdowski MIT 37-624C

>

> wo...@itd.nrl.navy.mil (J. B. Wood) Wed, 09 Jan 2002 08:25:02 -0500

>

> wri...@clam.prodigy.net (David Wright) Mon, 05 Jul 2004 19:56:21 GMT
English Language Relay Satellite Service

>

> dalt...@my-dejanews.com
NNTP-Posting-Host: 136.1.1.18 Gene Wright

>

> James Wright --> Win Johnson --> Roger Brock --> Matt Marshall --> Mike Gray

>

> Edward L. (Ned) Wright, UCLA Astronomy, Los Angeles CA 90095-1562
(310)825-5755, FAX (310)206-2096 wri...@astro.ucla.edu
on the page: www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/old_new_cosmo.html 1997-2007

>

> (Pine.OSF.3.90.950928153327.15680G-100000@thunder)
Wolfgang Wuster (bss...@bangor.ac.uk)
School of Biological Sciences, University of Wales, Bangor, UK

>

> "Nick Wynne" (ram...@beachyhd.demon.co.uk)

>

> z...@cco.caltech.edu (Douglas J. Zare)

>

> mzea...@airmail.net (Mike Zeares)

>

> "zolota" (zol...@shaw.ca) Sat, 16 Mar 2002 19:55:14 GMT

#######################################################


Archimedes Plutonium
Archimedes Plutonium, once Ludwig, is a long-time Usenet veteran, and easily among the best known of Usenet's mad scientists. ...
www.killfile.org/dungeon/why/ap.html - 7k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

The Killfile Dungeon
owned by Tim Skirvin, operated by Nik and Kile

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Archimedes Plutonium
plut...@willinet.net
Charges

Being a loud mad scientist.
History

Archimedes Plutonium, once Ludwig, is a long-time Usenet veteran, and easily among the best known of Usenet's mad scientists. His beliefs include the all-importance of the Plutonium atom, hence the name.

Arky, as many know him, is also the enemy of several more legitimate scientists, who occasionally have some fights with him. When AP was once subscribed to a few mailing lists against his will as a result of these fights, he posted all of the messages he received to news.admin.net-abuse.misc as evidence - against the advice of those there. When he would not stop the small flood, several people, including Tim, killfiled him.
Status

Archimedes was released on August 31, 1996, after three weeks within the dungeons. He currently continues to post to sci.* about his theories.
Skirvin's Notes

Actually, I kinda like Arky. He's funny. He's entertaining. He talks about silly things. People don't like him, and he doesn't understand why. He crossposts all over the place a lot, and can't see why this would be a problem. *snicker* Poor little kook...

'Course, Arky doesn't like me very much. He's taken to posting articles claiming that I'm writing chemistry textbooks or something...I'm positive that I don't fully understand what's going through his head. Oh well. Even if he meant to be malicious, he couldn't cause any damage.

One thing AP has done - he's managed to outrage my entire family. Really. He's been posting in all of their names lately; they're just kindof confused by the whole thing. This was still a bonus for the family, though, because a) they now know how to ignore kooks and b) they get bonus kook points for having been able to torture people without even knowing who they are. Heh.

AP managed to do one other thing, too - scare us half to death. In January 2001, there were a pair of murders at Dartmouth - around the same time that AP had left that college to wander the country. One intrepid reporter made a connection, and called first my Mom and then me to see if there was a connection. That's one good way to get really paranoid, to think that someone that really hated you may have just killed two others... Of course, it wasn't him, but it was freaky anyway.
Daemons' Notes

/Arky isn't really dangerous.../
*He's just annoying and loud*
/He's funny to listen to, too/
*It's kinda like Mad Max on the Quad, by all counts - fully sincere, but also fully psycho*
Evidence

# Arky gets plonked
# Archimedes Plutonium's Threats
# net.legends FAQ - Ludwig Plutonium
# Plutonium miniFAQ
# alt.sci.physics.plutonium
# Archimedes Plutonium (current homepage)
# Archimedes Plutonium (defunct homepage)
# Google Search: Archimedes Plutonium
# Dartmouth Murders
# Yahoo! - Archimedes Plutonium
# Many false clues in officials' hunt for Zantop killers (article from the Boston Globe about the Zantop murders; mentions AP)

Related Cases

[Related Cases]
Updates

# [2002/06/08] Updated for new template, talked about the Dartmouth Murders and how they related to AP.
# [1998/07/23] Mentioned AP's impact on my family life.
# [1997/08/21] Last full update.

Last Updated: Sun, Jun 30 2002
6708 accesses since 14 Nov 2003
Back to the Dungeon

#########################################


www.alcatroll.com/sean/kookdeck/ace-d.jpg
175 x 245 - 21k
Image may be scaled down and subject to copyright.

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl>http://www.alcatroll.com/sean/kookdeck/ace-d.jpg&imgrefurl>http://www.alcatroll.com/sean/kookdeck/&h>245&w>175&sz>21&hl>en&start>3&sig2>qwYYa1ItUpKRi_utHRiyaQ&um>1&tbnid>6-BBZQlU1kd2lM:&tbnh>110&tbnw>79&ei>k5OnRvDlFqLAiwGVsPnSDw&prev>/images%3Fq%3Darchimedes%2Bplutonium%26svnum%3D10%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN


The K00K Kard Deck
of alt.usenet.kooks!

[click each kook for more info]

##################################

placed both websites above in a Complaint Letter to South Dakota State
Attorney's Office on this day of 25 July 2007

###################################

http://www.superstringtheory.com/forum/extraboard/messages/86.html


Re: The Atom Universe Model
[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ Extra Dimensions ] [ FAQ ]

Posted by Don Wortzman on April 19, 19100 at 20:47:20:

In Reply to: Re: The Atom Universe Model posted by James on April 15, 19100 at 17:11:32:

Hi James,

The equation you gave for time is not correct. Here is
what it should be. When translating from one
inertial frame to another, there is a distance
term also.


t>g[t'+Vx'/c2]

where prime quantities are from moving clock,
non-primed are the stationary clock, and

g > (1-V2/c2)-1/2

Follow Ups: (Reload page to see most recent)

* Re: The Correct Equation for Time House 6/19/100 (1)
o The exponent is positive. James 6/19/100 (0)
* Re: The Atom Universe Model James 4/19/100 (5)
o Re: The Atom Universe Model Don Wortzman 4/21/100 (3)
+ I think I asked you this before.. James 4/21/100 (2)
# Re: I think I asked you this before.. Don Wortzman 4/21/100 (1)
* Re: I think I asked you this before.. James 4/21/100 (0)
o Just in case you need to see that.. James 4/20/100 (0)

#########################################################
http://www.superstringtheory.com/forum/extraboard/messages/87.html

Re: The Atom Universe Model
[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ Extra Dimensions ] [ FAQ ]

Posted by James on April 19, 19100 at 22:21:17:

In Reply to: Re: The Atom Universe Model posted by Don Wortzman on April 19, 19100 at 20:47:20:

The equation I gave is perfectly correct (in the back of high school physics text). If it wasn't
correct it still wouldn't alter the fact that your claiming
that all three brothers inertial frames are once again
symmetric after the ship undergoes an acceleration is
erronious.
g for .8c
>1/[1-(.8c)2]1/2>1.667
To>gT
1s>1.667T
1s/1.667>T
T>.6s
T>To[1-v2]1/2
T>1s[1-(.8c)2]1/2
T>.6s
T>propertime for clock in motion @ .8c.
To>propertime for clock at rest.

Follow Ups: (Reload page to see most recent)

* Re: The Atom Universe Model Don Wortzman 4/21/100 (3)
o I think I asked you this before.. James 4/21/100 (2)
+ Re: I think I asked you this before.. Don Wortzman 4/21/100 (1)
# Re: I think I asked you this before.. James 4/21/100 (0)
* Just in case you need to see that.. James 4/20/100 (0)


Post a Followup

Name :
E-Mail :
Subject :

Comments:

(The following are optional.)

Link URL :
Link Title :
Image URL :


[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ Extra Dimensions ] [ FAQ ]

#########################################

http://www.science-search.org/index/Physics/Alternative/Unified_Theories/28094.htm

Name: The Atom Universe Model

Description: Describes the universe as embedded into a nine-dimensional cylinder of the proportions of an atom, with all matter rotating around the cylinder at the speed of

Category: Unified Theories

Url: http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Arc/1210/index.htm

Date: 29-11-2000

Current Rating: 5.00




Rate this web site:

Rating: 5.00
Votes: 2079



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###########################################

Superdeterminism is a concept of physics, put forward by physicist John S. Bell, that everything which happens is like puppets on strings; everything is controlled. Every thought, every action, every feeling is ordered up by some entity, and fated to happen. In a world of superdeterminism there is no free will. There is a distinction between determinism and superdeterminism. Determinism is given initial states one can predict the end state. Superdeterminism is beyond determinism in that everything is fated to happen by some controlling entity. For example, determinism is often analogized by a pool or billards table where given the initial position of a ball and then struck by the pool-stick we can determine the future position, but the analogy of superdeterminism with these pool and billards balls is that the owner is going to take the balls and do with them as he pleases, whenever he pleases. In the Atom Totality Theory the controlling entity is the Nucleus of the Atom Totality.

John Bell discussed superdeterminism in a 1985 BBC interview:

There is a way to escape the inference of superluminal speeds and spooky action at a distance. But it (Superdeterminism) involves absolute determinism in the universe, the complete absence of free will. Suppose the world is super-deterministic, with not just inanimate nature running on behind-the-scenes clockwork, but with our behavior, including our belief that we are free to choose to do one experiment rather than another, absolutely predetermined, including the "decision" by the experimenter to carry out one set of measurements rather than another, the difficulty disappears. There is no need for a faster than light signal to tell particle A what measurement has been carried out on particle B, because the universe, including particle A, already "knows" what that measurement, and its outcome, will be.

The only alternative to quantum probabilities, superpositions of states, collapse of the wave function, and spooky action at a distance, is that everything is superdetermined. For me it is a dilemma. I think it is a deep dilemma, and the resolution of it will not be trivial; it will require a substantial change in the way we look at things.

The concept has not received widespread attention among physicists.

########################################

Google please engineer a delete button to original authors of threads; the capability to delete stalkers invading their science discussion

alouatta....@gmail.com

unread,
May 23, 2018, 4:28:56 PM5/23/18
to
On Wednesday, May 23, 2018 at 1:19:13 PM UTC-7, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
> On Wednesday, May 23, 2018 at 1:47:57 PM UTC-5, alouatta....@gmail.com wrote:
> > On Wednesday, May 23, 2018 at 11:10:43 AM UTC-7, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
> > > #3-8 Toto Space Product in Geometry Logic// Teaching True Mathematics
> > >
> > AGAIN!
>
>
> \\\|///\\\/
> \\ - - //
> ( 0 0 )
> \ ( ) /
> oOOo ~ oOOo STALKERS UNITED MOVIE

...

Michael Moroney

unread,
May 23, 2018, 5:43:44 PM5/23/18
to
>Subject: Google please engineer a delete button to original authors of
>threads; the capability to delete stalkers invading their science
>discussion

"Science discussion"? Discussion??? That's the whole point! You _refuse_
to discuss anything in these Usenet discussion groups! If anyone even
tries, you either attack them as a "failure of math/physics", or, more
recently, you delete your post and run. (BTW, that doesn't even work
outside Google. I see all your 'deleted' posts, so it looks like to me,
and everyone else not using Google Groups, that you are just spamming the
same thing over and over again. Good thing for you that Google no longer
cares, if they actually cared about abuse, they would have kicked you off
for spamming.)

Archimedes Plutonium

unread,
Sep 25, 2023, 12:06:23 AM9/25/23
to


TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS, AP seeks the super easiest calculus possible on Earth-- polynomials as the only valid functions-- thus, and therefore, making derivative and integral as easy as Power Rule- 14 year olds master calculus. Because the Power Rule is merely add or subtract 1 from exponent so we can teach calculus in High School.

Dan's big mistake-- he did not learn the lessons of TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS.

Old Math makes and keeps Calculus as classroom torture chambers with their 1,000s of different functions yet the polynomial is the only valid function of math, and makes it super super easy to learn calculus

TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS, AP seeks the super easiest calculus possible on Earth-- polynomials as the only valid functions-- thus, and therefore, making derivative and integral as easy as Power Rule- 14 year olds master calculus.

If you come to me with a pathetic non polynomial especially that ugly trig functions, I have you go home and convert your nonsense to a polynomial. The Lagrange interpolation converts stupid nonfunctions like trig, into valid functions of polynomials.

TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS textbooks, makes calculus as easy as adding or subtracting 1 from exponent--only valid functions are polynomials contrast with mainstream--vomiting during exams, torture chamber and nervous breakdown by sado-masochist teachers. Old Math is thousands of different kook functions with thousands of different rules. AP Calculus is one function-- the polynomial for we care about truth in math, not on whether kooks of math become rich and famous off the suffering-backs of students put through a torture chamber that is present day calculus. If you come to math with a function that is not a polynomial, you have to convert it to a polynomial. Once converted, calculus is super super easy. But math professors seem to enjoy torturing students, not teaching them. Psychology teaches us that when a kook goes through a torture chamber and comes out of it as a math professor-- they want to be vindictive and sado masochists and love to torture others and put them through the same torture chamber that they went through. AP says-- stop this cycle of torture and teach TRUE CORRECT MATH.

TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS textbooks, makes calculus as easy as adding or subtracting 1 from exponent--only valid functions are polynomials contrast with mainstream--vomiting during exams, torture chamber and nervous breakdown by sado-masochist teachers. Old Math is thousands of different kook functions with thousands of different rules. AP Calculus is one function-- the polynomial for we care about truth in math, not on whether kooks of math become rich and famous off the suffering of students put through a torture chamber that is present day calculus. If you come to math with a function that is not a polynomial, you have to convert it to a polynomial. Once converted, calculus is super super easy. But math professors seem to enjoy torturing students, not teaching them.

Old Math calculus textbooks like Stewart are more than 1,000 pages long and they need that because they have a mindless thousand different functions and no valid proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus. AP's calculus is less than 300 pages, because we have a valid geometry proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus which demands the only valid function of math be a polynomial function. We can teach calculus in Junior High School for the calculus is reduced to adding or subtracting 1 from the exponent. The only hard part of calculus in New Math is to convert the boneheaded function into a polynomial that was brought to the table by the boneheaded math professor who thinks that a function does not need to be a polynomial.

AP calculus transforms the calculus classroom. It is no longer vomiting during exams. No longer a torture chamber for our students of youth, and no longer a nightmare nor nervous breakdown for our youthful students, who, all they ever wanted was the truth of mathematics.

Teaches that derivative predicts next point of function graph--silly Old Math has derivative as tangent to function graph unable to predict. The great power of Calculus is integral is area under function graph thus physics energy, and its prediction power of the derivative to predict the next future point of function graph thus making the derivative a "law of physics as predictor". Stupid Old Math makes the derivative a tangent line, while New Math makes the derivative the predictor of next point of function graph. No wonder no-one in Old Math could do a geometry, let alone a valid proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, for no-one in Old Math even had the mind to realize Calculus predicts the future point in the derivative.

AP has managed to make sci.math a battlefield where AP is alone on one side and every other poster is either a direct attack on AP or an indirect attack on AP such as Markus, Gabriel, Thomasson, WM trying to push AP off the front page. While over in sci.physics, the maintenance team at sci.physics still have control of the helm. But sci.math is without a helmsman and rudderless. Quite a spectacle, and time for a change of personnel ISP of sci.math to be at least like sci.physics. I do not know how much of this if any, is the fault of NSF Dr.Panchanathan, Kibo Parry Moron-ey-Volney, Tim Skirvin, Gilbert Strang...

TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS-- only math textbooks with a valid proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus--teaches that derivative predicts next point of function graph--silly Old Math has derivative as tangent to function graph unable to predict. This is why calculus is so important for physics, like a law of physics-- predicts the future given nearby point, predicts the next point. And of course the integral tells us the energy. Silly stupid Old Math understood the integral as area under the function graph curve, but were stupid silly as to the understanding of derivative-- predict the next point as seen in this illustration:


From this rectangle of the integral with points A, midpoint then B


______
| |
| |
| |
---------


To this trapezoid with points A, m, B

B
/|
/ |
m /----|
/ |
| |
|____|


The trapezoid roof has to be a straight-line segment (the derivative)
so that it can be hinged at m, and swiveled down to form rectangle for
integral.

Or going in reverse. From rectangle, the right triangle predicts the next successor point of function graph curve of B, from that of midpoint m and initial point of function graph A.


My 134th published book

Introduction to TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS: Volume 1 for ages 5 through 26, math textbook series, book 1 Kindle Edition
by Archimedes Plutonium (Author)

The 134th book of AP, and belatedly late, for I had already written the series of TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS in a 7 volume, 8 book set. This would be the first book in that 8 book set (one of the books is a companion book to 1st year college). But I suppose that I needed to write the full series before I could write the Introduction and know what I had to talk about and talk about in a logical progression order. Sounds paradoxical in a sense, that I needed to write the full series first and then go back and write the Introduction. But in another sense, hard to write an introduction on something you have not really fully done and completed. For example to know what is error filled Old Math and to list those errors in a logical order requires me to write the full 7 volumes in order to list in order the mistakes.

Cover Picture: Mathematics begins with counting, with numbers, with quantity. But counting numbers needs geometry for something to count in the first place. So here in this picture of the generalized Hydrogen atom of chemistry and physics is a torus geometry of 8 rings of a proton torus and one ring where my fingers are, is a equator ring that is the muon and thrusting through the proton torus at the equator of the torus. So we count 9 rings in all. So math is created by atoms and math numbers exist because atoms have many geometry figures to count. And geometry exists because atoms have shapes and different figures.

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• ASIN ‏ : ‎ B08K2XQB4M
• Publication date ‏ : ‎ September 24, 2020
• Language ‏ : ‎ English
• File size ‏ : ‎ 576 KB
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◦ #3 in 45-Minute Science & Math Short Reads
◦ #23 in Calculus (Kindle Store)
◦ #182 in Calculus (Books)



#5-2, My 45th published book.

TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS: Volume 2 for ages 5 to 18, math textbook series, book 2
by Archimedes Plutonium (Author) (Amazon Kindle edition)

Last revision was 2NOV2020. And this is AP's 45th published book of science.

Preface: Volume 2 takes the 5 year old student through to senior in High School for their math education.

This is a textbook series in several volumes that carries every person through all his/her math education starting age 5 up to age 26. Volume 2 is for age 5 year old to that of senior in High School, that is needed to do both science and math. Every other math book is incidental to this series of Teaching True Mathematics.

It is a journal-textbook because Amazon's Kindle offers me the ability to edit overnight, and to change the text, almost on a daily basis. A unique first in education textbooks-- almost a continual overnight editing. Adding new text, correcting text. Volume 2 takes the 5 year old student through to senior in High School for their math education. Volume 3 carries the Freshperson in College for their math calculus education.

Cover Picture: The Numbers as Integers from 0 to 100, and 10 Grid when dividing by 10, and part of the 100 Grid when dividing by 100. Decimal Grid Numbers are the true numbers of mathematics. The Reals, the rationals & irrationals, the algebraic & transcendentals, the imaginary & Complex, and the negative-numbers are all fake numbers. For, to be a true number, you have to "be counted" by mathematical induction. The smallest Grid system is the Decimal 10 Grid.



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ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07RG7BVZW
Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 2, 2019
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 2024 KB
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Best Sellers Rank: #235,426 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
#15 in General Geometry
#223 in Geometry & Topology (Books)


#5-3, 55th published book

TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS: Volume 3 for age 18-19, 1st year College Calculus, math textbook series, book 3 Kindle Edition
by Archimedes Plutonium (Author)

Last revision was 25Jun2021. And this is AP's 55th published book of science.

Teaching True Mathematics, by Archimedes Plutonium 2019

Preface: This is volume 3, book 3 of Teaching True Mathematics, designed for College Freshperson students, 1st year college students of age 18-19. It is the continuation of volume 2 for ages 5 through 18 years old.

The main major topic is the AP-EM equations of electricity and magnetism, the mathematics for the laws of electricity and magnetism; what used to be called the Maxwell Equations of Physics. The 1st Year College Math has to prepare all students with the math for all the sciences. So 1st year college Math is like a huge intersection station that has to prepare students with the math they need to do the hard sciences such as physics, chemistry, biology, astronomy, geology, etc. What this means is, 1st year college is calculus that allows the student to work with electricity and magnetism. All the math that is needed to enable students to do electricity and magnetism. In Old Math before this textbook, those Old Math textbooks would end in 1/3 of the text about Arclength, vector space, div, curl, Line Integral, Green's, Stokes, Divergence theorem trying to reach and be able to teach Maxwell Equations. But sadly, barely any Old Math classroom reached that 1/3 ending of the textbook, and left all those college students without any math to tackle electricity and magnetism. And most of Old Math was just muddle headed wrong even if they covered the last 1/3 of the textbook. And that is totally unacceptable in science. This textbook fixes that huge hole and gap in Old Math education.

And there is no way around it, that a course in 1st year College Calculus is going to do a lot of hands on experiment with electricity and magnetism, and is required of the students to buy a list of physics apparatus-- multimeter, galvanometer, coil, bar magnet, alligator clip wires, electromagnet, iron filing case, and possibly even a 12 volt transformer, all shown in the cover picture. The beginning of this textbook and the middle section all leads into the ending of this textbook-- we learn the AP-EM Equations and how to use those equations. And there is no escaping the fact that it has to be hands on physics experiments in the classroom of mathematics.

But, do not be scared, for this is all easy easy easy. For if you passed and enjoyed Volume 2 TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS, then I promise you, you will not be stressed with Volume 3, for I go out of my way to make it clear and understandable.

Warning: this is a Journal Textbook, meaning that I am constantly adding new material, constantly revising, constantly fixing mistakes or making things more clear. So if you read this book in August of 2019, chances are it is different when you read it in September 2019. Ebooks allow authors the freedom to improve their textbooks on a ongoing basis.

The 1st year college math should be about the math that prepares any and all students for science, whether they branch out into physics, chemistry, biology, geology, astronomy, or math, they should have all the math in 1st year college that will carry them through those science studies. I make every attempt possible to make math easy to understand, easy to learn and hopefully fun.

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• ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07WN9RVXD
• Publication date ‏ : ‎ August 16, 2019
• Language ‏ : ‎ English
• File size ‏ : ‎ 1390 KB
• Simultaneous device usage ‏ : ‎ Unlimited
• Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
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• Print length ‏ : ‎ 236 pages
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• Best Sellers Rank: #1,377,070 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
◦ #411 in Calculus (Kindle Store)
◦ #2,480 in Calculus (Books)



#5-4, 56th published book

COLLEGE CALCULUS GUIDE to help students recognize math professor spam from math truth & reality// math textbook series, book 4 Kindle Edition

by Archimedes Plutonium (Author)


#1 New Releasein 15-Minute Science & Math Short Reads


This textbook is the companion guide book to AP's Teaching True Mathematics, 1st year College. It is realized that Old Math will take a long time in removing their fake math, so in the interim period, this Guide book is designed to speed up the process of removing fake Calculus out of the education system, the fewer students we punish with forcing them with fake Calculus, the better we are.
Cover Picture: This book is part comedy, for when you cannot reason with math professors that they have many errors to fix, that 90% of their Calculus is in error, you end up resorting to comedy, making fun of them, to prod them to fix their errors. To prod them to "do right by the students of the world" not their entrenched propaganda.
Length: 54 pages


Product details
File Size: 1035 KB
Print Length: 64 pages
Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
Publication Date: August 18, 2019
Sold by: Amazon.com Services LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B07WNGLQ85
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Not Enabled 

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Lending: Enabled
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #253,425 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
#38 in 90-Minute Science & Math Short Reads
#318 in Calculus (Books)
#48 in Calculus (Kindle Store)

#5-5, 72nd published book

TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS: Volume 4 for age 19-20 Sophomore-year College, math textbook series, book 5 Kindle Edition
by Archimedes Plutonium (Author)

Preface: This is volume 4, book 5 of Teaching True Mathematics, designed for College Sophomore-year students, students of age 19-20. It is the continuation of volume 3 in the end-goal of learning how to do the mathematics of electricity and magnetism, because everything in physics is nothing but atoms and atoms are nothing but electricity and magnetism. To know math, you have to know physics. We learned the Calculus of 2nd dimension and applied it to the equations of physics for electricity and magnetism. But we did not learn the calculus of those equations for 3rd dimension. So, you can say that Sophomore year College math is devoted to 3D Calculus. This sophomore year college we fill in all the calculus, and we start over on all of Geometry, for geometry needs a modern day revision. And pardon me for this book is mostly reading, and the students doing less calculations. The classroom of this textbook has the teacher go through page by page to get the students comprehending and understanding of what is being taught. There are many hands on experiments also.

Cover Picture shows some toruses, some round some square, torus of rings, thin strips of rings or squares and shows them laid flat. That is Calculus of 3rd dimension that lays a ring in a torus to be flat in 2nd dimension.
Length: 105 pages

Product details
• ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0828M34VL
• Publication date ‏ : ‎ December 2, 2019
• Language ‏ : ‎ English
• File size ‏ : ‎ 952 KB
• Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
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• Print length ‏ : ‎ 105 pages
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• Best Sellers Rank: #242,037 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
◦ #36 in Calculus (Kindle Store)
◦ #219 in Calculus (Books)


#5-6, 75th published book

TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS: Volume 5 for age 20-21 Junior-year of College, math textbook series, book 6 Kindle Edition
by Archimedes Plutonium 2019

This is volume 5, book 6 of Teaching True Mathematics, designed for College Junior-year students, students of age 20-21. In first year college Calculus we learned calculus of the 2nd dimension and applied it to the equations of physics for electricity and magnetism. And in sophomore year we learned calculus of 3rd dimension to complete our study of the mathematics needed to do the physics of electricity and magnetism. Now, junior year college, we move onto something different, for we focus mostly on logic now and especially the logic of what is called the "mathematical proof". Much of what the student has learned about mathematics so far has been given to her or him as stated knowledge, accept it as true because I say so. But now we are going to do math proofs. Oh, yes, we did prove a few items here and there, such as why the Decimal Grid Number system is so special, such as the Pythagorean Theorem, such as the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus with its right-triangle hinged up or down. But many ideas we did not prove, we just stated them and expected all students to believe them true. And you are now juniors in college and we are going to start to prove many of those ideas and teach you "what is a math proof". Personally, I myself feel that the math proof is overrated, over hyped. But the math proof is important for one reason-- it makes you better scientists of knowing what is true and what is a shaky idea. A math proof is the same as "thinking straight and thinking clearly". And all scientists need to think straight and think clearly. But before we get to the Mathematics Proof, we have to do Probability and Statistics. What you learned in Grade School, then High School, then College, called Sigma Error, now becomes Probability and Statistics. It is important because all sciences including mathematics needs and uses Probability and Statistics. So, our job for junior-year of college mathematics is all cut out and ahead for us, no time to waste, let us get going.

Cover Picture: is a sample of the Array Proof, a proof the ellipse is not a conic but rather a cylinder cut wherein the oval is the slant cut of a cone, not the ellipse.

Length: 175 pages


Product details
ASIN : B0836F1YF6
Publication date : December 26, 2019
Language : English
File size : 741 KB
Text-to-Speech : Enabled
Screen Reader : Supported
Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
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Print length : 175 pages
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Best Sellers Rank: #3,768,255 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
◦ #3,591 in Probability & Statistics (Kindle Store)
◦ #19,091 in Probability & Statistics (Books)



#5-7, 89th published book

TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS: Volume 6 for age 21-22 Senior-year of College, math textbook series, book 7 Kindle Edition
by Archimedes Plutonium 2020

Last revision was 6Feb2021.
Preface: This is the last year of College for mathematics and we have to mostly summarize all of mathematics as best we can. And set a new pattern to prepare students going on to math graduate school. A new pattern of work habits, because graduate school is more of research and explore on your own. So in this final year, I am going to eliminate tests, and have it mostly done as homework assignments.

Cover Picture: Again and again, many times in math, the mind is not good enough alone to think straight and clear, and you need tools to hands-on see how it works. Here is a collection of tools for this senior year college classes. There is a pencil, clipboard, graph paper, compass, divider, protractor, slide-ruler. And for this year we spend a lot of time on the parallelepiped, showing my wood model, and showing my erector set model held together by wire loops in the corners. The plastic square is there only to hold up the erector set model.

Length: 110 pages

Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B084V11BGY
Publication date ‏ : ‎ February 15, 2020
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 826 KB
Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Print length ‏ : ‎ 110 pages
Lending ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Best Sellers Rank: #224,965 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
◦ #345 in Mathematics (Kindle Store)
◦ #373 in Physics (Kindle Store)
◦ #2,256 in Physics (Books)

#5-8, 90th published book

TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS: Volume 7 for age 22-26 Graduate school, math textbook series, book 8 Kindle Edition
by Archimedes Plutonium 2020

Last revised 1NOV2020. This was AP's 90th published book of science.

Preface: This is College Graduate School mathematics. Congratulations, you made it this far. To me, graduate school is mostly research, research mathematics and that means also physics. So it is going to be difficult to do math without physics. Of course, we focus on the mathematics of these research projects.

My textbook for Graduate school is just a template and the professors teaching the graduate students are free of course to follow their own projects, but in terms of being physics and math combined. What I list below is a template for possible projects.

So, in the below projects, I list 36 possible research projects that a graduate student my like to undertake, or partake. I list those 36 projects with a set of parentheses like this (1), (2), (3), etc. Not to be confused with the chapters listing as 1), 2), 3), etc. I list 36 projects but the professor can offer his/her own list, and I expect students with their professor, to pick a project and to monitor the student as to his/her progresses through the research. I have listed each project then cited some of my own research into these projects, below each project is an entry. Those entries are just a help or helper in getting started or acquainted with the project. The entry has a date time group and a newsgroup that I posted to such as sci.math or plutonium-atom-universe Google newsgroups. Again the entry is just a help or helper in getting started.

Now instead of picking one or two projects for your Graduate years of study, some may select all 36 projects where you write a short paper on each project. Some may be bored with just one or two projects and opt for all 36.

Cover Picture: A photo by my iphone of a page on Permutations of the Jacobs book Mathematics: A Human Endeavor, 1970. One of the best textbooks ever written in Old Math, not for its contents because there are many errors, but for its teaching style. It is extremely rare to find a math textbook written for the student to learn. Probably because math professors rarely learned how to teach in the first place; only learned how to unintentionally obfuscate. The page I photographed is important because it is the interface between geometry's perimeter or surface area versus geometry's area or volume, respectively. Or, an interface of pure numbers with that of geometry. But I have more to say on this below.
Length: 296 pages

Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B085DF8R7V
Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 1, 2020
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 828 KB
Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
Print length ‏ : ‎ 296 pages
Lending ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Best Sellers Rank: #224,981 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
◦ #13 in General Geometry
◦ #213 in Geometry & Topology (Books)


#5-9, 221st published book

An Education Ladder Guideline for teaching mathematics and a Test to see if you are cut out to be a mathematician//Teaching True Mathematics
by Archimedes Plutonium (Author) (Amazon's Kindle)

Preface: This book is written to improve math education in school and at home. Trouble is, you cannot improve math education if the professors of mathematics have much of their teachings in error. So I write this book mostly as a test for math professors because to shine a light on math professor failure is the best way to improve math teaching, and thereby improve school curriculums especially colleges and universities. But others, such as laypersons are welcomed to join in. And it is the laypersons and students that will make the greatest amount of use of this book because math professors are usually stubborn and idiotic and hard to change for the better. And so when students and laypersons keep asking questions of their math professors, their brainwashing and thus poor teaching, they eventually come around to the truth and then change their bad behavior and bad misunderstanding; to proper true mathematics.

Cover Picture: Is my iphone photograph of a rubber washer inside a plastic cone. The washer is at a steep slant angle to the cone perpendicular. Notice the washer near the apex is fully touching the side of the cone, but the washer directed towards the base has not yet cut through the side of the cone, and you can see a rainbow or a crescent shape of area where the washer will intersect the side of the cone, (where my two finger are), making a total figure of a Oval, never the ellipse. I was taking this picture as one person, so I had the iphone camera in one hand and the cone in another hand, and had to use a rubber washer to stay in place. The same green plastic cone used in this picture appears in both of my published books of the proof slant cut of cone is oval, never the ellipse.

My 3rd published book with the same green cone on cover.
AP's Proof-Ellipse was never a Conic Section // Math proof series, book 1 Kindle Edition
by Archimedes Plutonium (Author)

My 68th published book with the same green cone on cover.
Proofs Ellipse is never a Conic section, always a Cylinder section and a Well Defined Oval definition//Student teaches professor series, book 5 Kindle Edition
by Archimedes Plutonium (Author)

Product details
• ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0BQDYMYKQ
• Publication date ‏ : ‎ December 16, 2022
• Language ‏ : ‎ English
• File size ‏ : ‎ 551 KB
• Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
• Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
• Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
• X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
• Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
• Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
• Print length ‏ : ‎ 65 pages



#5-10, 160th published book

MATHOPEDIA-- List of 82 fakes and mistakes of Old Math// mathematics & logic
by Archimedes Plutonium

Preface:
A Mathopedia is like a special type of encyclopedia on the subject of mathematics. It is about the assessment of the worth of mathematics and the subject material of mathematics. It is a overall examination and a evaluation of mathematics and its topics.

The ordering of Mathopedia is not a alphabetic ordering, nor does it have a index. The ordering is purely that of importance at beginning and importance at end.

The greatest use of Mathopedia is a guide to students of what not to waste your time on and what to focus most of your time. I know so many college classes in mathematics are just a total waste of time, waste of valuable time for the class is math fakery. I know because I have been there.

Now I am going to cite various reference sources of AP books if anyone wants more details and can be seen in the Appendix at the end of the book.

I suppose, going forward, mathematics should always have a mathopedia, where major parts of mathematics as a science are held under scrutiny and question as to correctness. In past history we have called these incidents as "doubters of the mainstream". Yet math, like physics, can have no permanent mainstream, since there is always question of correctness in physics, there then corresponds questions of correctness in mathematics (because math is a subset of physics). What I mean is that each future generation corrects some mistakes of past mathematics. If anyone is unsure of what I am saying here, both math and physics need constant correcting, of that which never belonged in science. This then converges with the logic-philosophy of Pragmatism (see AP's book of logic on Pragmatism).

Product details
• ASIN ‏ : ‎ B09MZTLRL5 and ASIN ‏ : ‎ B09ZWFLKHC
• Publication date ‏ : ‎ December 2, 2021
• Product details
• ASIN ‏ : ‎ B09ZWFLKHC
• Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 8, 2022
• Language ‏ : ‎ English
• File size ‏ : ‎ 1154 KB
• Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
• Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
• Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
• X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
• Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
• Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
• Print length ‏ : ‎ 71 pages



y z
| /
| /
|/______ x

Read my recent posts in peace and quiet.
https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en#!forum/plutonium-atom-universe
Archimedes Plutonium
Archimedes Plutonium's profile photo
Archimedes Plutonium
2:12 AM (15 hours ago)



to
Alright I come to realize I have no graphic explanation for the proof of the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus for a downward slope function graph. I gave a proof for the upward slope function.

We start with the integral rectangle in the Cell, a specific cell of the function graph. In 10 Decimal Grid there are exactly 100 cells for each number interval, say from 0 to 0.1, then the next cell is 0.1 to 0.2. The midpoint in each cell belongs to a number in the next higher Grid System, the 100 Grid. So the midpoint of cell 1.1 to 1.2 is 1.15 as midpoint.

Now the integral in that cell of 1.1 to 1.2 is a rectangle and say our function is x^2 --> Y. So the function graph is (1.1, 1.21) and (1.2, 1.44). Now we are strictly in 10 Grid borrowing from 100 Grid.

So say this is our Integral rectangle in cell 1.1 to 1.2.

_____
| |
| |
| |
| |
_____
1.1 1.2

More later,...

What I am getting at is that in a upward slope the right triangle whose tip is 1.44 hinged at the midpoint 1.15 predicts that future point in the derivative as the right triangle hypotenuse.

But the geometry is different for a downward slope function such as 10 -x --> Y. In this case we have the rectangle integral, but instead of hinging up the right triangle to predict the next point of the function graph, we totally remove the right triangle from the graph and the missing right-triangle is the successor point.

Teaches that derivative predicts next point of function graph--silly Old Math has derivative as tangent to function graph unable to predict. The great power of Calculus is integral is area under function graph thus physics energy, and its prediction power of the derivative to predict the next future point of function graph thus making the derivative a "law of physics as predictor". Stupid Old Math makes the derivative a tangent line, while New Math makes the derivative the predictor of next point of function graph. No wonder no-one in Old Math could do a geometry, let alone a valid proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, for no-one in Old Math even had the mind to realize Calculus predicts the future point in the derivative.
>
>
> TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS-- only math textbooks with a valid proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus--teaches that derivative predicts next point of function graph--silly Old Math has derivative as tangent to function graph unable to predict. This is why calculus is so important for physics, like a law of physics-- predicts the future given nearby point, predicts the next point. And of course the integral tells us the energy. Silly stupid Old Math understood the integral as area under the function graph curve, but were stupid silly as to the understanding of derivative-- predict the next point as seen in this illustration:
>
>
> From this rectangle of the integral with points A, midpoint then B
>
>
> ______
> | |
> | |
> | |
> ---------
>
>
> To this trapezoid with points A, m, B
>
> B
> /|
> / |
> m /----|
> / |
> | |
> |____|
>
>
> The trapezoid roof has to be a straight-line segment (the derivative)
> so that it can be hinged at m, and swiveled down to form rectangle for
> integral.
>
> Or going in reverse. From rectangle, the right triangle predicts the next successor point of function graph curve of B, from that of midpoint m and initial point of function graph A.
>

AP
Archimedes Plutonium's profile photo
Archimedes Plutonium
1:04 PM (4 hours ago)



to
In the case of a upward slope function, the derivative requires a midpoint in the integral rectangle for which the right triangle is hinged at the midpoint and raised to rest upon the 4 sided trapezoid that the rectangle becomes. Thus the vertex tip of right triangle predicts the next future point of the function graph by this vertex tip.

However, a different situation arises as the function graph has a downward slope. There is no raising of a right triangle cut-out of the integral rectangle. And there is no need for a midpoint on top wall of the integral rectangle. For a downward slope Function Graph, we cut-away a right triangle and discard it. Here the vertex tip is below the level of the entering function graph and is predicted by the derivative.

So there are two geometry accounting for the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus proof. There is the accounting of a function graph if the function has a upward slope and there is the accounting if the function graph is a downward slope. Both involve the Integral as a rectangle in a cell of whatever Grid System one is in. In 10 Grid there are 100 cells along the x-axis, in 100 Grid there are 100^2 cells. If the function is upward slope we need the midpoint of cell and the right triangle is hinged at that midpoint. If the function is downward slope, the right triangle is shaved off and discarded-- no midpoint needed and the resultant figure could end up being a rectangle becoming a triangle. In the upward slope function graph, the rectangle becomes a trapezoid, possibly even a triangle.

AP
Archimedes Plutonium's profile photo
Archimedes Plutonium
3:32 PM (2 hours ago)



to
So for an upward slope function, the Proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus would have the integral rectangle turned into this.

> ______
> | |
> | |
> | |
> ---------
>
>
> To this trapezoid with points A, m, B
>
> B
> /|
> / |
> m /----|
> / |
> | |
> |____|
>

While for a downward slope function, the Proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus would have the integral rectangle turned into this.

______
|....... |
|....... |
|....... |
---------


|\
|...\
|....... |
---------

Where the right-triangle is now swiveled at midpoint but rather where a right triangle is cut-away from the Integral that is a rectangle and that right triangle is then discarded.

AP
Archimedes Plutonium's profile photo
Archimedes Plutonium
11:18 PM (1 hour ago)



to
Now two of the most interesting and fascinating downward slope functions in 10 Grid of 1st Quadrant Only would be the quarter circle and the tractrix.

Many of us forget that functions are Sequence progressions, starting at 0 and moving through all 100 cells of the 10 Decimal Grid System.

Here, I have in mind for the quarter circle a radius of 10 to be all inclusive of the 10 Grid.

AP
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Archimedes Plutonium
11:27 AM (4 hours ago)



to
By insisting that the only valid function in the world is a polynomial function, we thus reduce Calculus to the ultra simple task of the Power Rule.

So we have a function of x^3, the derivative by Power Rule is (3)x^2. The integral by Power Rule is (1/4)x^4, and to check to see if integral is correct, we take the derivative of (1/4)x^4 to see if it becomes x^3, and surely it does so.

So what AP teaches math to the world, is that Calculus can be mastered by 13 and 14 year olds. Students just beginning High School.

Impossible in Old Math because Old Math is filled with mistakes and errors and crazy idiotic and stupid math.

In New Math, we clean house. We do not let creeps and kooks fill up math that causes students to have nightmares and nervous breakdowns and vomit before tests.

In New Math, we think only of our young students, we do not think of kooks like Dr.Hales, Dr.Tao, Dr. Wiles trying to achieve fame and fortune at the expense of our young students-- who, all they wanted was to learn the truth of mathematics.

If you run to a teacher of New Math with a function, and that function is not a polynomial, then the teacher is going to tell you "that is not a valid function, and you simply convert it to a polynomial".

In AP math class in 9th grade USA, AP makes students of 13 and 14 year old master Calculus. Master calculus better, far better than 1st year college students in Old Math at any college or university across the globe.

14 year old students in AP math class master calculus and "have fun and joy" in math class.

19 or 20 year olds in colleges and universities go through nightmares, vomiting, and even nervous breakdowns in their learning calculus.

I am not exaggerating here, but obvious observations of education of mathematics.

No-one in math education cares about students in Old Math. No-one has ever Cleaned House of Old Math, but let the rotten fetid Old Math stench increase.

AP, King of Science
Archimedes Plutonium's profile photo
Archimedes Plutonium
3:56 AM (10 hours ago)



to

Now I need to add more to the Power Rules of Calculus as we make Polynomials be the only valid functions of mathematics. If you come to math with a function not a polynomial, you are sent home to convert your silly contraption into a polynomial over a interval in 1st Quadrant Only, a interval of concern.

But in all the years I did calculus, I seem to not have registered in my mind the geometrical significance of the Power Rules. What is the geometry of taking x^2 to the power rule of n(x^n-1) for derivative. Then what is the geometry significance of taking the integral power rule-- (1/(n+1)) (x^(n+1)).

It seems to me that at one moment in time, that geometry stuck to my mind, but is now elusive, I cannot recall the geometry significance of either Power Rule when played out on x^n.

Cavalieri 1598-1647

So that if we start with a polynomial function such as x^2 -> Y, we instantly know from the power rules that the derivative is 2x and the integral is 1/3x^3.

Derivative Power Rule of a polynomial x^n that the derivative is n(x^n-1).

The Integral Power Rule is sort of the opposite of the derivative rule so for polynomial x^n that the integral is (1/(n+1)) (x^(n+1)).

On Tuesday, September 5, 2023 at 3:00:37 AM UTC-5, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
> Now I need to add more to the Power Rules of Calculus as we make Polynomials be the only valid functions of mathematics. If you come to math with a function not a polynomial, you are sent home to convert your silly contraption into a polynomial over a interval in 1st Quadrant Only, a interval of concern.
>
> But in all the years I did calculus, I seem to not have registered in my mind the geometrical significance of the Power Rules. What is the geometry of taking x^2 to the power rule of n(x^n-1) for derivative. Then what is the geometry significance of taking the integral power rule-- (1/(n+1)) (x^(n+1)).
>
> It seems to me that at one moment in time, that geometry stuck to my mind, but is now elusive, I cannot recall the geometry significance of either Power Rule when played out on x^n.
>
> Cavalieri 1598-1647
>
> So that if we start with a polynomial function such as x^2 -> Y, we instantly know from the power rules that the derivative is 2x and the integral is 1/3x^3.
>
> Derivative Power Rule of a polynomial x^n that the derivative is n(x^n-1).
>
> The Integral Power Rule is sort of the opposite of the derivative rule so for polynomial x^n that the integral is (1/(n+1)) (x^(n+1)).

Now I need to include the Cavalieri proof, a geometry proof that rectangles under a function graph such as Y--> x^2 yields the power rule formula (1/(n+1))(x^(n+1)) so for x^2 the integral is (1/3)x^3.

I would think that showing Cavalieri's proof would be standard fare in all 1st year college calculus textbooks. To my surprise, not Stewart, not Apostol, not Fisher& Zieber, not Ellis & Gulick, not Strang, no-one is up to the task of showing how Cavalieri got that formula from summing rectangles.

Morris Kline in volume 1 "Mathematical Thought" shows a picture.

Stillwell in "Mathematics and its History" shows a picture.

But it must be too difficult for college authors to replicate Cavalieri's proof of approximating rectangles for x^2.

Now if I were back in the days of Cavalieri and tasked to find a formula, I would do rectangles and trial and error. First finding a formula for easy ones such as Y--> x, then Y-->x^2, then a third trial, Y--> 2x to see if the formula is good, sort of a math induction settling upon (1/(n+1))(x^(n+1)).

But I am very disappointed that none of my college calculus books derives the formula (1/(n+1))(x^(n+1)) via approximation.


There were no standards for math proof in the days of Cavalieri for his genius of deriving the Integral Power rule. Y--> x^n is integral (1/(n+1))(x^(n+1))

So what I am going to do is prove (1/(n+1))(x^(n+1)) in New Math.

I looked through the literature and there was no actual Old Math proof of (1/(n+1))(x^(n+1))

This is worthy of a whole entire new book of itself.

And the beauty is that it is a Mathematical Induction proof.

And the beauty also is that functions are chains of straightline connections from one point to the next in Discrete Geometry.

That means we no longer approximate the integral but actually derive the Integral from a Right Trapezoid whose area is 1/2(base_1 + base_2)(height).

We see that in a function such as 3x becomes integral (1/2)(3)x^2 due to that right-trapezoid area.

The right-trapezoid is such that its base_1 and base_2 are the Y points for cells of calculus in Decimal Grid Systems.

Trouble in Old Math is when the "so called historian" reads a passage in old works, they become overgenerous in crediting a proof when none really existed -- Fermat, Cavalieri. And this is the reason that no-one in modern times who wrote a Calculus textbook features the Cavalieri Integral Power Rule, because there never was a proof, .... until now... a Mathematical Induction proof.

AP, King of Science

None of this is a proof of Cavalieri's integral power rule formula. Because Geometry is discrete and all curves in geometry are chains of straightline segments. The Internet boasts of some modern recent proofs of Cavalieri, but I suspect all those are bogus claims, being victims of computer graphics and no honest down to earth proof at all. I myself was a victim of computer graphics, for a computer can really spit out any image you ask it to spit out, such as hexagon tiling of sphere surface.

--- quoting Wikipedia ---
The modern proof is to use an antiderivative: the derivative of xn is shown to be nxn−1 – for non-negative integers. This is shown from the binomial formula and the definition of the derivative – and thus by the fundamental theorem of calculus the antiderivative is the integral. This method fails for
∫1/x dx
which is undefined due to division by zero. The logarithm function, which is the actual antiderivative of 1/x, must be introduced and examined separately.


The derivative
(x^n)'=nx^{n-1} can be geometrized as the infinitesimal change in volume of the n-cube, which is the area of n faces, each of dimension n − 1.
Integrating this picture – stacking the faces – geometrizes the fundamental theorem of calculus, yielding a decomposition of the n-cube into n pyramids, which is a geometric proof of Cavalieri's quadrature formula.
For positive integers, this proof can be geometrized: if one considers the quantity xn as the volume of the n-cube (the hypercube in n dimensions), then the derivative is the change in the volume as the side length is changed – this is xn−1, which can be interpreted as the area of n faces, each of dimension n − 1 (fixing one vertex at the origin, these are the n faces not touching the vertex), corresponding to the cube increasing in size by growing in the direction of these faces – in the 3-dimensional case, adding 3 infinitesimally thin squares, one to each of these faces. Conversely, geometrizing the fundamental theorem of calculus, stacking up these infinitesimal (n − 1) cubes yields a (hyper)-pyramid, and n of these pyramids form the n-cube, which yields the formula. Further, there is an n-fold cyclic symmetry of the n-cube around the diagonal cycling these pyramids (for which a pyramid is a fundamental domain). In the case of the cube (3-cube), this is how the volume of a pyramid was originally rigorously established: the cube has 3-fold symmetry, with fundamental domain a pyramids, dividing the cube into 3 pyramids, corresponding to the fact that the volume of a pyramid is one third of the base times the height. This illustrates geometrically the equivalence between the quadrature of the parabola and the volume of a pyramid, which were computed classically by different means.

Alternative proofs exist – for example, Fermat computed the area via an algebraic trick of dividing the domain into certain intervals of unequal length; alternatively, one can prove this by recognizing a symmetry of the graph y = xn under inhomogeneous dilation (by d in the x direction and dn in the y direction, algebraicizing the n dimensions of the y direction), or deriving the formula for all integer values by expand
--- end quoting Wikipedia on Cavalieri's quadrature formula ---

--- quoting Google Search hits ---

A New Proof of Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula

JSTOR
https://www.jstor.org › stable
by NJ Wildberger · 2002 · Cited by 5 — Theorem of Calculus. Here is a proof of Cavalieri's formula that uses the (hidden) symmetry of the func- tion x" and the Binomial ...

A New Proof of Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula

ResearchGate
https://www.researchgate.net › publication › 266256869...
PDF | On Nov 1, 2002, N. J. Wildberger published A New Proof of Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ...

(PDF) A New Proof of Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula

Academia.edu
https://www.academia.edu › A_New_Proof_of_Cavali...
We use the contemporary mathematical technologies to prove the fundamental assumptions of the Euclidean Goemetry with indivisibles and we develop a model- ...

12.A. The proof of Cavalieri's Principle

University of California, Riverside
https://math.ucr.edu › ~res › math153-2019
pdf, Cavalieri's Principle is a powerful method for comparing the volumes of two solids in 3-space. The purpose of this document is to discuss the steps needed.
2 pages

A New Proof of Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula

Taylor & Francis Online
https://www.tandfonline.com › ... › Volume 109, Issue 9
by NJ Wildberger · 2002 · Cited by 5 — A New Proof of Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula. The American Mathematical Monthly: Vol. 109, No. 9, pp. 843-845.

Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula

Wolfram MathWorld
https://mathworld.wolfram.com › CavalierisQuadratur...
Wildberger, N. J. "A New Proof of Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula." Amer. Math. Monthly 109, 843-845, 2002. Referenced on Wolfram|Alpha. Cavalieri's Quadrature ...

A geometric proof of Cavalieri's quadrature formula
Oocities
http://www.oocities.org › ilanpi › cavalieri
Wildberger, A new proof of Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula, American Math. Monthly 109, November 2002. 76 rue Mazarine. 75006 Paris. France. ila...@mail.com.

Proving the Cavalieri Principle using integrals (Calculus I)

Mathematics Stack Exchange
https://math.stackexchange.com › questions › proving...
Dec 28, 2019 — Cavalieri's Principle states that if a family of parallel planes gives equal cross-sectional areas for two solids S1 and S2, then the volumes of ...
1 answer

·

Top answer:
I think it depends on what is referred to as a solid here. Considering a solid being somehow space bounded and the volume being a continuous sum of positive ...
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On Optimal Quadrature Formulae

Emis.de
https://www.emis.de › HOA › JIA › Volume5_3
by F LANZARA · Cited by 48 — THEOREM 2.1 There exists a unique quadratureformula oftype (1.4)- ... Compare the last quadrature formula with the composite Cavalieri-. Simpson's rule.
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Cavalieri's method of indivisibles

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by K ANDERSEN · Cited by 178 — These theorems he applies in Books III, IV and V where he deals with quadratures and cubatures related to conic sections. The sixth book is mainly devoted to ...
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[PDF] Remark on Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula

Semantic Scholar
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May 3, 2005 — Every calculus student learns Cavalieri's quadrature formula for the antiderivative of x^n (integer n). We observe here that the logarithmic ...
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Thinking this way he came up with an excellent derivation of the basic rule of integration, Cavalieri's Quadrature Formula: \displaystyle \int_0^a x^n…
--- end of Google search hits ---

AP writes: well Cavalieri never had a proof of integral power rule and many historians of math could never recognize a proof from the side of a barn, a big barn, mind you.

What Cavalieri had was a "argument" in support of (1/(n+1))(x^(n+1)), not a proof. And from what I can decipher of Wildberger's claim, is all mouth and no substance. Much like Wiles on FLT, or Tao on primes, or Hales on Kepler Packing. The desire of fame and fortune is overwhelming for some in mathematics, and trample all over truth.

AP

Now by predict, I meant specifically the derivative with upward slope, where you slice a right triangle into the integral rectangle and lift it up upon the midpoint and the vertex of the right triangle predicts the next point of the function graph.

But things work differently for a downward slope function graph for you slice away an entire right triangle from the integral rectangle to obtain the successor point- the predicted point by the derivative.

> From this rectangle of the integral with points A, midpoint then B
>
>
> ______
> | |
> | |
> | |
> ---------
>
>
> To this trapezoid with points A, m, B
>
> B
> /|
> / |
> m /----|
> / |
> | |
> |____|
>
>
> The trapezoid roof has to be a straight-line segment (the derivative)
> so that it can be hinged at m, and swiveled down to form rectangle for
> integral.
>

Yes, in the case of a upward slope function, the derivative requires a midpoint in the integral rectangle for which the right triangle is hinged at the midpoint and raised to rest upon the 4 sided trapezoid that the rectangle becomes. Thus the vertex tip of right triangle predicts the next future point of the function graph by this vertex tip.
>
> However, a different situation arises as the function graph has a downward slope. There is no raising of a right triangle cut-out of the integral rectangle. And there is no need for a midpoint on top wall of the integral rectangle. For a downward slope Function Graph, we cut-away a right triangle and discard it. Here the vertex tip is below the level of the entering function graph and is predicted by the derivative.
>
> So there are two geometry accounting for the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus proof. There is the accounting of a function graph if the function has a upward slope and there is the accounting if the function graph is a downward slope. Both involve the Integral as a rectangle in a cell of whatever Grid System one is in. In 10 Grid there are 100 cells along the x-axis, in 100 Grid there are 100^2 cells. If the function is upward slope we need the midpoint of cell and the right triangle is hinged at that midpoint. If the function is downward slope, the right triangle is shaved off and discarded-- no midpoint needed and the resultant figure could end up being a rectangle becoming a triangle. In the upward slope function graph, the rectangle becomes a trapezoid, possibly even a triangle.
>
We have a different situation for a downward slope function graph for we do not need the midpoint, as a downward slope can slice away at most 1/2 of the integral rectangle.

> So for an upward slope function, the Proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus would have the integral rectangle turned into this.
>
> > ______
> > | |
> > | |
> > | |
> > ---------
> >
> >
> > To this trapezoid with points A, m, B
> >
> > B
> > /|
> > / |
> > m /----|
> > / |
> > | |
> > |____|
> >
>
> While for a downward slope function, the Proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus would have the integral rectangle turned into this.
>
> ______
> |....... |
> |....... |
> |....... |
> ---------
>
>
> |\
> |...\
> |....... |
> ---------
>
> Where the right-triangle is now swiveled at midpoint but rather where a right triangle is cut-away from the Integral that is a rectangle and that right triangle is then discarded.
>
>
Yes, now two of the most interesting and fascinating downward slope functions in 10 Grid of 1st Quadrant Only would be the quarter circle and the tractrix.


Let me run a scenario for you, please.

There are 7-8 billion people on Earth today.

In the past 50 years we can roughly say that 50 million people studied Calculus in school or at home.

50 million people tried and attempted to learn calculus math.

I certainly was one amoung that 50 million.

And was AP the only one in 50 million to recognize that if you take polynomials as being the Only Valid Function that the Calculus becomes the Easiest, Super Easy math, because the Power Rules apply and where the derivative is simply a subtract 1 from exponent and the integral is add 1 to exponent.

I find it extremely sad and hard to believe that only AP saw how to make Calculus Super super super easy? Surely there must have been at least 25 million of those 50 million who found the derivative and integral of polynomials a joy and pleasure to do. Surely AP was not the only person in 50 million to see the Polynomial Calculus was a pleasure, fun and even exciting, rush to class to do a derivative or integral of a polynomial-- teacher, please give me more polynomial exercises. They are better than Star Trek on TV.

This is the whole point of a Revolution in Math Calculus.

When we make the only valid function in all of math be a Polynomial, we reduce calculus to adding 1 or subtracting 1.

We do not allow creeps, goons and kooks to clutter the table of math and calculus with their horrible awful smelly functions which are not polynomials. No, we disband these kooks and tell them go home and convert your worthless crap to be a polynomial before you can stink up the halls of mathematics. Convert your kook nonsense to a polynomial then you can come and do mathematics with us.

AP, King of Science

As a case in point, a mere example.

We have at MIT a Dr. Gilbert Strang with his Calculus textbooks, and I bought the 1991 edition of Calculus. And my opinion of Strang's text is scatterbrained. For I often find that Gilbert in lecturing on a topic is too quick to bring in side show issues, never focusing on just one topic.

But worst of this Strang text is he has no valid proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus FTC, no geometry proof and his Limit analysis of FTC is idiot of a proof-- ie-- no proof at all, for we all analyze things in the course of a day, and none of us are so preposterous as to think we have proven something above and beyond analyzing that something.

And so, I, AP reflects back to the time of 1968, when my name was Ludwig Hansen, sitting in a geology classroom of University of Cincinnati. Learning geology from a textbook that never discusses Continental Drift and this is 1968, mind you and Wegener had given massive evidence of Continental Drift way back to 1915, some 53 years later, AP and the classroom suffering from Truth of Science by having to buy a book about static-Earth, being tested graded lectured upon fake geology.

Not much difference from students sitting in classrooms at MIT or elsewhere buying Strang's CALCULUS with no valid proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, and where any fool function is allowed to enter, thousands and thousands of fool functions, when Mathematics has only one Valid Function-- the Polynomial function. For you can only arrive at a True Valid Proof of Fundamental Theorem of Calculus by using polynomials as functions.

So how many students every year are punished by having to learn calculus with fool functions, with no valid proof of FTC. Where the calculus classroom puts students not through a Pleasure learning session but a gauntlet torture chamber, whipping the students into nervous breakdowns and vomiting during exams.

All for what??? How much money does Dr. Strang make from his awful book Calculus?? Let me guess estimate.

The book probably costs $100 in our inflation environment. And typically a author gets 1/2 of that in royalties.

Say MIT teaches a class of 100 students in calculus per year would be 50 x 100 = $5,000. And say a estimate that around the world there are 100 schools teaching from this book of 100 students in their classroom would make Gilbert $500,000 per year in book sales of his Calculus.

Same can be said of AP back in 1968 having to learn fake geology with no Continental Drift plate tectonics, so that some so called scientists reaps a reward of 1/2 a million dollars in book sales. And that thousands of students taught lectured and tested upon fake geology.

This is one of the grand benefits of a Usenet and a Internet, that we speed up the process of throwing out Fake -Math, fake-geology and all other fake sciences. Freedom of Speech of Internet of Usenet allows for science to be Showered, Cleaned UP, bathed from its wretched stink of Old fake science. Clean Up their science.

The only valid functions in mathematics are Polynomial Functions, which in turn, makes Calculus be super super super easy. No more vomiting by students in a calculus exam. No more nervous breakdowns by students taking calculus.

AP

Volney

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Sep 25, 2023, 3:39:40 AM9/25/23
to
🐁 of Math and Giant Rabid Sewer 🐀 of Physics Archimedes "failure"
Plutonium <plutonium....@gmail.com> fails at math and science:


> My 134th published book
>
> Introduction to TEACHING TRUE MATHEMATICS: Volume 1 for ages 5 through 26, math textbook series, book 1 Kindle Edition
> by Archimedes Plutonium (Author)
>
Why do you keep trying to brainwash poor little 5 year old kids?



WARNING TO STUDENTS, PARENTS and TEACHERS: Archimedes Plutonium is
offering to teach your children his broken physics and math. BEWARE! He
will corrupt the minds of your children! Mr. Plutonium is not content to
be a failure of math and physics all by himself. He wants everyone else
to fail as well! He teaches bizarre false physics and math, such as
atoms contain the unstable muon, water is H4O and not H2O, the ellipse
isn't a conic section, there are no negative numbers and no complex
numbers, that a sine wave isn't sinusoidal but semicircles, cycloids or
parabolas (depending on his mood), plus many, many other instances of
bad math and physics.

Plutonium has previously tried to corrupt our youth by posting his books
on Usenet. That has failed until now, perhaps in part due to the fact
Usenet is an old, dying medium, which few modern students even know of,
much less use. However, Mr. Plutonium has somehow duped Amazon into
providing his dangerous books for free on Kindle. This has greatly
increased the danger to our students!

One of his dangerous tricks is teach false Boolean logic such as 10 AND
2 = 12. His method at doing this is particularly insidious. He'll post a
false statement that nobody believes, such as 10 OR 2 = 12, say that it
is false (which it is), but then he'll try to replace it with another
similar false statement such as 10 AND 2 = 12, in order to really
confuse future computer scientists. Plutonium is taking advantage of the
fact that AND means different things in Boolean logic and elementary
arithmetic, as AND is an informal synonym for plus/addition. It is
important for future computer scientists to remember that in the bitwise
Boolean logic used by modern computers, 10 OR 2 = 10 and 10 AND 2 = 2.
Of course in pure Boolean logic the only possible values are true and
false (1 or 0), so in pure Boolean logic the statements "10 AND 2" and
"10 OR 2" don't even make sense. Don't let evil Plutonium's bad logic
confuse you!

Plutonium has been targeting children as young as 5. A new attempt to
corrupt the minds of young children is to teach that the alphabet has 12
letters, 6 vowels and 6 consonants. This sounds like a great way to
keep our children from reading!

Nobody knows why Plutonium wishes to corrupt the minds of our youth like
this. Perhaps Plutonium is envious of their potential success, which he
never had because he is a failure at math and science. Plutonium is not
content to be a failure at math and physics all by himself. He wants
everyone to fail as well. Some claim Plutonium is an agent of China, in
order for China to dominate the world economy. Maybe he is a minion of
Kim Jong Un of North Korea. Most likely, however, he is an agent of
Putin and Russia, since Plutonium has previously attempted to summon
Russian robots in 2017 "to create a new, true mathematics" in an attempt
to destroy mathematics.

Additionally, Plutonium has started a Cult of Failure. He is trying to
convince students to worship his evil pagan Plutonium atom god of
Failure. This cult is anti-science and anti-mathematics. Its only goal
is to promote failure in math and science.

There is some evidence this Cult of Failure may be a suicide cult.
Plutonium has advocated that the "good guy" nations join into a
supernation and threaten to "flatten" the (nuclear armed) "bad guy"
nations who misbehave. The idea may to initiate an all-out nuclear
war when "bad guy" nations retaliate. Not simply is Plutonium or his
cult committing suicide but would take Planet Earth with them. As the
war in Ukraine continues, Plutonium keeps asking NATO to attack the
Russians, starting a nuclear WW3, which he feels is unavoidable. More
evidence of Plutonium's Cult of Failure being a suicide cult.

Plutonium is now encouraging resistance fighters fighting the regimes
in Russia and Iran to attack power lines in Tehran and Moscow by
carrying long vertical aluminum poles under them, presumably to short
them out, complete with a diagram. Obviously, this will not end well
for for the resistance fighter. The question is, did he do this because
he is Putin's stooge trying to kill off resistance fighters? Or is this
part of Plutonium's Suicide Cult of Failure, meaning this is merely a
suggestion how to commit suicide while failing to harm the regimes? Or
both?

But the point is, stay away, if he offers to give or sell you one of his
dangerous books. Especially now since they are available for free from
otherwise legitimate Amazon.

Dan Christensen

unread,
Sep 25, 2023, 2:00:15 PM9/25/23
to
STUDENTS BEWARE: Don't be a victim of AP's fake math and science

On Monday, September 25, 2023 at 12:06:23 AM UTC-4, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:

[snip]

> .... Dan Christensen ...



[snip]

Time for another spanking, Archie Poo! When will you learn? Once again...

From his antics here at sci.math, it is obvious that AP has abandoned all hope of being recognized as a credible personality. He is a malicious internet troll who now wants only to mislead and confuse students. He may not be all there, but his fake math and science can only be meant to promote failure in schools. One can only guess at his motives. Is it revenge for his endless string of personal failures in life? Who knows?

In AP's OWN WORDS that, over the years here, he has NEVER renounced or withdrawn:

"Water is really H4O, not H2O." ********** NEW **********
--July 27, 2023

"Negative numbers are the witches and hobgoblins of insane kook mathematicians. "
--Dec. 7, 2022

“Primes do not exist, because the set they were borne from has no division.”
--June 29, 2020

“The last and largest finite number is 10^604.”
--June 3, 2015

“0 appears to be the last and largest finite number”
--June 9, 2015

“0/0 must be equal to 1.”
-- June 9, 2015

“0 is an infinite irrational number.”
--June 28, 2015

“No negative numbers exist.”
--December 22, 2018

“Rationals are not numbers.”
--May 18, 2019

According to AP's “chess board math,” an equilateral triangle is a right-triangle.
--December 11, 2019

Which could explain...

“The value of sin(45 degrees) = 1.” (Actually 0.707)
--May 31, 2019

AP deliberately and repeatedly presented the truth table for OR as the truth table for AND:

“New Logic
AND
T & T = T
T & F = T
F & T = T
F & F = F”
--November 9, 2019

AP seeks aid of Russian agents to promote failure in schools:

"Please--Asking for help from Russia-- russian robots-- to create a new, true mathematics [sic]. What I like for the robots to do, is list every day, about 4 Colleges ( of the West) math dept, and ask why that math department is teaching false and fake math, and if unable to change to the correct true math, well, simply fire that math department until they can find professors who recognize truth in math from fakery...."
--November 9, 2017


And if that wasn't weird enough...

“The totality, everything that there is [the universe], is only 1 atom of plutonium [Pu]. There is nothing outside or beyond this one atom of plutonium.”
--April 4, 1994

“The Universe itself is one gigantic big atom.”
--November 14, 2019

AP's sinister Atom God Cult of Failure???

“Since God-Pu is marching on.
Glory! Glory! Atom Plutonium!
Its truth is marching on.
It has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;
It is sifting out the hearts of people before its judgment seat;
Oh, be swift, my soul, to answer it; be jubilant, my feet!
Our God-Pu is marching on.”
--December 15, 2018 (Note: Pu is the atomic symbol for plutonium)

Updated version (repetition removed):

"Oh Atom Plutonium, as great as you are
How great thou are, are, are, are.
Oh Atom Plutonium, the God that you are
How beautiful is your world of science
Your science is the world
How beautiful is your world of science
Your science is the world
Oh Atom Plutonium, Great God of Atoms
Atom of Atoms
Oh Atom Plutonium, as great as thou art"
--March 24, 2023

Dan

Download my DC Proof 2.0 freeware at http://www.dcproof.com
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