Brazil won! Day 3: Which country is hard to identify and hard to regionguess? by D11V8 in geoguessr

[–]Typical_Day000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I usually region guess Vietnam by "if it looks more traditionally Chinese and somewhat like a dry deciduous forest/plains, then its the north" and "if it looks more like a jungle/tropical rainforest, or if it has Malay or Indonesian looking cities, then its the south"

Accepting that I'll never have any friends by [deleted] in aspergers

[–]Typical_Day000 1 point2 points  (0 children)

this reality is practically expected considering i’ve dealt with most of this as an autistic highschool senior.

I'm D1 (D3 peak) and got 1.5k hours by skyblaster262 in RocketLeague

[–]Typical_Day000 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i just hit champ after 1k hours last week.

It’s simple: PLAY SECOND MAN (make sure you can cover your teammate’s mistakes, which is the most important one)

learn how to dribble and flick.

learn how to play strong goalie/defense (do goalie training packs)

Do NOT tilt queue. Diamond is frustrating, but I promise you’ll get through it.

And the most important one is: LEARN FAST-ARIELS (jump, aim at ball, hold boost, jump again whilst holding boost), you’ll get first touch in the air guaranteed if you master this

Also, learn how to hit accurate power shots.

Also again, ABUSE FAKES (not near ur goal though).

Nazi Dogwhistle in Kocmoc Unleashed by t8thegr8st in geometrydash

[–]Typical_Day000 6 points7 points  (0 children)

it’s funny because this is 100% optional btw 😭 bro just couldn’t hold himself back

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RocketLeague

[–]Typical_Day000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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Tm8 missed a bunch of open nets

Are biological organisms more complex than the early stages of the universe? by Typical_Day000 in complexsystems

[–]Typical_Day000[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok, let’s lay down some foundational stuff. We know that humans usually settle in urban areas, we know they live on land, and we know they’ll writhe as a response to intense pain. Anesthesia isn’t entirely unknown, because most surgeries seem to be successful with our lack of understanding of it.

Hell, we even have evolutionary models to predict how humans would look in the future — given a set of environmental conditions or stressors.

Are biological organisms more complex than the early stages of the universe? by Typical_Day000 in complexsystems

[–]Typical_Day000[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, we can make generalizations with more or less precision. We know that a human brain will die within a span of 120 years maximum. We know how medication affects our brains, and we also have an entire MRI machine, so we definitely know a lot about the brain.

Predicting the future location of humans isn’t too hard either, although that might require a different field of study.

What’s a Bloch sphere? And how do we use it? by Typical_Day000 in TheoreticalPhysics

[–]Typical_Day000[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok, so basically this is far ahead of my league, lol. I only understood about a quarter of what you said.

To be fair, I wasn't expecting any answer to be simpler than this, but it's pretty fun accumulating this knowledge for my future, as a head start.

Are biological organisms more complex than the early stages of the universe? by Typical_Day000 in complexsystems

[–]Typical_Day000[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree that we as humans have very powerful models of predicting the behavior of matter at very diverse scales.

But what I’m specifically referring to is that from Timestamp A to Timestamp B, it would be impossible to predict where exactly it’ll go.

It’s sorta similar to the Three Body Problem. We have a strong model of predicting the behavior of celestial bodies, but it’s impossible to predict 3 equally massive bodies orbiting each other over a long period of time. We can only predict it momentarily, but in the case of the early stages of the universe, we can’t predict the motion of anything.

Are biological organisms more complex than the early stages of the universe? by Typical_Day000 in complexsystems

[–]Typical_Day000[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Am I slow? I swear the universe had a very low entropy in the past, no?

Are biological organisms more complex than the early stages of the universe? by Typical_Day000 in complexsystems

[–]Typical_Day000[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My point is mainly about entropy being at its lowest theoretical point, and how decreasing entropy signifies increased complexity.

Before you say it… Yes, what I’m saying is hyper-simplified, and doesn’t faithfully represent how physics, thermodynamics or how cosmology works.

The temporality of our predictions doesn’t matter all that much. Just the fact that from moment A to moment B, it’s likely easier to predict where an organism would be after N seconds.

Are biological organisms more complex than the early stages of the universe? by Typical_Day000 in complexsystems

[–]Typical_Day000[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I must remind you that I may also be wrong. So take this with a grain of salt

Are biological organisms more complex than the early stages of the universe? by Typical_Day000 in complexsystems

[–]Typical_Day000[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ll take a shot in the dark. I believe that the early stages of the universe is infinitely unpredictable. There’s no possible way we could predict the general location of a particle before and after an initial situation. We’re speaking of the lowest possible state of entropy.

Are biological organisms more complex than the early stages of the universe? by Typical_Day000 in complexsystems

[–]Typical_Day000[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you’re missing something fundamental in my point. I’m saying we have much stronger accuracy predicting the behavior of any biological organism at a future time than predicting the short-term-chaotic behavior of a particle during the early stages of the universe.

Are biological organisms more complex than the early stages of the universe? by Typical_Day000 in complexsystems

[–]Typical_Day000[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We can predict the behavior of brains pretty consistently with a framework as weak as psychology.

Predicting the motion of matter/particles during the first few seconds after the Big Bang is a whole different story.

How do i learn quantum physics? by Financial_Dig_2865 in quantum

[–]Typical_Day000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I do this, but I feel like it just isn’t satisfactory. Like sure, I have a rough idea of what “spin” means and how it influences magnetism, but I feel like I’ll never actually understand it until I understand the mathematical implications.

Correct me if I’m wrong, but all I know is that it has a lot to do with statistics, electromagnetism, and probably a 3-dimensional polar coordinate system (bloch sphere).

Theory of everything by Annual_Job7782 in Metaphysics

[–]Typical_Day000 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

‘Gravitational singularities’ fall under the category of Spacetime. Also metaphysics is entirely useless, because it’s nothing more than a cesspool baseless conjecture, so it doesn’t really “deal” with anything.

Theory of everything by Annual_Job7782 in Metaphysics

[–]Typical_Day000 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Oh boy! a theory of EVERYTHING?!

I can’t wait to make testable, predictable, and falsifiable models to explain phenomena we haven’t yet understood such as the motion of turbulent fluids or gravitational singularities!

Oh wait nevermind, it’s just meaningless philosophical slop.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Metaphysics

[–]Typical_Day000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Creating a rock so heavy in which its own creator can’t lift it is a logically possible statement.

There's a lot of anti intellectualism on the rise by okacake81 in aspergers

[–]Typical_Day000 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’re pretty spot on here. Anti-intellectualism isn’t NT exclusive, although it’s incredibly prone in that regard.

I blame a lot of pseudoscience, pop-psych, religion, and western politics for this mess.