| Heh heh... |
[05 Jul 2004|11:26am] |
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Salu's Hypothesis
In every community there exists a representative cynic Salu with a cynicism factor of x such that every new hypothesis proposed, explaining the behavioral aspects of the said community, must be empirically tested n raised to the power x times, where n is a real number representing the probability coefficient that the said hypothesis also directly affects the behavioral patterns of the representative cynic Salu, in order to become a working theory.
Menon's Paradox
The probability coefficient n for Salu's hypothesis is so high that when raised to the cynicism factor x it results in a number so inordinately large that Salu's Hypothesis itself fails to qualify as a working theory.
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Don't ask me what it means or why it's posted here... Just something I remembered from college...
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