Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au
Last updated: 6 September 2014
Lecture 39
There is one function that
(a)
In the Beginning, created something from nothing, and
(b)
is "unchanging", or rather, its change is itself.
Through the ages thinkers have contemplated this function and nowadays it is common to write (a) and (b) in abbreviated form:
(a')
and
(b')
but the meaning is still the same.
Two of the children of god are eve and adam:
If we try to understand god in normal terms
then we find that since
and since
and so
from which we see that god exists everywhere and goes on forever.
One of the amazing things about god is that
You can see that god must be this way by supposing that there were a "different" function that
(a'')
is "unchanging".
(b'')
In the Beginning, was the way that god is after millenia.
Because of the chain rule,
and
and, since
and
we see that both and
fit the job
description for this "different" function job and this is why
What about eve and adam? Since
and since
it follows that
From these we see that
and
and
all of which illustrate that eve and adam are both identical twins and opposites at the same time. Another manifestation is
i.e.
Let and
Then, in the Beginning,
the point was at
So
and
The triangle in this picture has
and so
since the hypotenuse is length 1, the opposite edge is length and
the adjacent edge is length
Note: Mathematicians are a cloistered group and prefer to study in
anonymity. Thus they write
in the mathematical literature.
Notes and References
These are a typed copy of Lecture 39 from a series of handwritten lecture notes for the class MATH 221 given on December 13, 2000.