humanology 2090 .

  • 2 days ago
Transcript
00:00:00Hello friends, welcome to Humanology 2019.
00:00:09Let's do some ground stretching, floor stretching, okay, okay.
00:00:25Stretching before stretching.
00:00:44Stretching before stretching.
00:00:56Okay.
00:01:01Stretching after stretching.
00:01:08Okay, let's flip over.
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00:01:43Now, we'll martial arts, some head bounce, okay.
00:01:57Okay, all directions.
00:01:59Five minutes break, please, thank you.
00:02:03Now, sides and backs, okay.
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00:02:10Yeah, five minutes, thank you.
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00:09:32Welcome to Humanology 2019.
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00:11:24Although she majored in economics and political science, me?
00:11:30I majored in computer science.
00:11:31I did not double major.
00:11:33I did not even minor in some other thing, okay?
00:11:37In economics, I didn't major, I didn't minor, but I know more economics than Kamala Harris
00:11:42who majored in economics and political science, okay?
00:11:46Yeah.
00:11:47Because I studied, okay?
00:11:50And I'm smarter than Harris, okay?
00:11:52That's why.
00:11:53Now, let's talk about pathological liar, okay?
00:11:57For example, yeah, Donald J. Trump, and I've seen other people.
00:12:01What is pathological liar?
00:12:04It's like, for example, Donald J. Trump, pathological liar, I've seen them before, okay?
00:12:10It's like they lie all the time, okay?
00:12:14Pathological liar.
00:12:16So why do they do it?
00:12:20They are like good storytellers.
00:12:23It's just that they confuse reality and fiction, fantasy, imagination.
00:12:32That's why they're pathological.
00:12:33Yeah, they are mentally ill, they are sick, including Donald J. Trump, okay?
00:12:38And I'm a writer.
00:12:41When I write novels in fiction space, not reality, okay?
00:12:45I expressly say, this is novel, this is not real, okay?
00:12:49But I do mix reality and imagination.
00:12:53When I write novel as a fiction, that's not a lie, it's an art form, literature, okay?
00:13:01That's how novel is written for any writers, okay?
00:13:06So my recommendation to pathological liars, yeah, write novels, okay?
00:13:11Because what Trump does is, he tell a half fiction, half real story, good story, interesting
00:13:20story, but he presents it as truth, as reality, then it becomes a lie, right?
00:13:29Yeah, that's not good, because that's dishonesty, and also defamation as well, okay?
00:13:37Yeah, and like Arlington Cemetery, yeah, Trump, yeah, he would flower to the cemetery of the
00:13:50soldiers who passed away in Afghanistan.
00:13:53He used that occasion for his political purpose, right?
00:13:57So Arlington National Cemetery, they blocked Trump's photographers, because that's their
00:14:04rule, they want to enforce the law.
00:14:07And then Trump campaign people characterized those professionals in Arlington Cemetery
00:14:14as mentally ill individuals, okay?
00:14:16Just like spokesperson said that.
00:14:20That's how crazy Trump's people are, and just like Trump, all they do is lie, break the
00:14:28law, there are laws, they disregard the laws, okay?
00:14:36Doesn't look good.
00:14:41Yeah.
00:14:46Yeah.
00:14:51Yeah.
00:14:54So Trump committed treason, okay, that's like capital offense, federal law, okay?
00:15:02But do I want Trump to get death penalty by court of law?
00:15:09I do not want that, I'm against death penalty in general.
00:15:13And then do I want Trump to go to jail?
00:15:16Well, he's supposed to go to jail, but I'd rather see him comfortably retire and maybe
00:15:25continue to run for president as long as he lives, and continue to lose.
00:15:31I don't want him to win, but Trump running again and again, I'm okay with that, because
00:15:36he's funny, okay?
00:15:39It's entertaining, but I want to see him continue to lose again and again, yeah.
00:15:46Because it's funny.
00:15:48Yeah.
00:15:50Okay.
00:15:52What else?
00:15:54Yeah.
00:15:56Yeah.
00:15:58Okay.
00:16:00Yeah.
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00:16:14Yeah.
00:16:16Okay.
00:16:18Yeah.
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00:16:22Okay.
00:16:24Do my recommendations to pathetical liars?
00:16:28Yeah, write a book.
00:16:30Write book.
00:16:32Fictions.
00:16:34And do not integrate your imagination with reality, because it becomes a lie, okay?
00:16:37Yeah.
00:16:39Yeah.
00:16:41Yeah.
00:16:43Yeah, creating a story in a fiction space is called literature. That's not a lie. Okay.
00:16:57Yeah. So yeah, just pathological, confusing fiction and reality. Yeah, they are mentally
00:17:03people. That's what has the name pathological liars like Donald Trump. Okay. Yeah. Oh,
00:17:11well, that's a fine experience. Okay, thank you. Yeah. Oh, shower feels so good. It's
00:17:18so refreshing, energizing. Yeah, it's nice. So me instead of like taking a bath once a
00:17:27week only. Yeah. Six day shower, one day, Sunday bath. Then I look young every day.
00:17:36Great. Thank you. Welcome to Humanology. Okay. Very cool.
00:20:27Okay. So when I was in the army, I think I was doing AIT.
00:20:56I took shower like every other day. But my bunkmate told me, hey, Hunky, you need to
00:21:05shower every day, man. Because all these germs, you know. He's right. Also, our friends recommend
00:21:13it too. And they're right. Okay. So because when I was in the US Army, I mean, shower
00:21:19was not an enjoyable experience. Because we have to take shower very fast. Like five
00:21:25minutes, 10 minutes, whatever. Okay. And but when I take a shower at home, I can take all
00:21:31the time I want. Right. Of course, water gets cold. Still. Okay. Yeah. And a bathtub is
00:21:43more spacious. US Army barracks shower facility. Not that big. Okay. Yeah.
00:22:11Okay. Shall we do mathematics a little bit? Sure.
00:22:33Let's prove a couple theorems. Formally. Yeah, we can do that.
00:22:50We have a lot to prove, you know. Oh, yeah. Yeah, I went to the gym as well. Fun, fun,
00:23:07fun.
00:23:32Okay. Nice small whiteboard here. Mini whiteboard. Yeah. So these days at the gym, it's more
00:23:44like therapeutic recovery because my right shoulder injury, you know. So yeah. Okay.
00:23:55Very cute. Baby whiteboard. But you won't grow up though. You'll just stay somewhere like this.
00:24:04Okay. Just like an adorable doll. Okay. Right now. No, what are we proving?
00:24:35There's just so many lemmas and theorems, you know. We're discovering like something
00:24:46you like every day, right? So, which is good. Let me get some vodka here. Okay. Yeah.
00:25:17So to compare like Harry's campaign and Trump campaign is like, Harry's like positivity,
00:25:25Trump's negativity. Harry's a beautiful lady, like bright smile, beaming laughter, and Trump
00:25:35is like angry and negative and dark. And to add RFK Jr. campaign, I think it darkens
00:25:51the campaign even more. Okay. I mean, RFK Jr. seems to be a decent guy to me. Okay.
00:25:57But I think he's quite a smart guy. Yeah. I saw his interview and I tend to appreciate
00:26:06him more than before, but not a huge fan. Okay. Yeah. He's kind of too old as well.
00:26:23And the raspy voice and the kind of dead events, kind of like darkness, like creepy,
00:26:32the kind of atmosphere that he's carrying. RFK Jr. Okay. So, yeah. So, but seems to be
00:26:49a decent guy to me. Okay. I appreciate him running as an independent for sure. Yeah.
00:26:58I appreciate there's a fellow independent candidate. Yeah. Yeah.
00:27:07All right.
00:27:33Cheers. Happy Wednesday.
00:27:38Oh, my neck is sore. Okay. Let's prove. We call it slash slash DRM. Okay.
00:27:52Left hand side.
00:28:04Colleagues. Okay.
00:28:19There's so many discoveries of theorems here. It's not easy to keep track of like,
00:28:29keep track of like, which theorem is already, already we proved and which we didn't. We're
00:28:36gonna start like ground out, although it is already known to be proven, like somewhere
00:28:41in Wikipedia or textbooks, we'll prove it again. Okay. Yeah. Fractionalize it right.
00:28:47Yeah. Cheers.
00:28:57Definitions.
00:29:11I have to save some room.
00:29:21So, like 1.7, fraction 1.7, 0.3. Okay. So, it's like.
00:29:34Okay.
00:29:36Cheers.
00:29:49And
00:29:55colleagues equal to x minus bottom x. We call the top x bottom x. This is easier to say,
00:30:10than ceiling wall flooring. Okay. Top x bottom x. Okay. Cheers.
00:30:28You want to prove this? Go for it. Okay. Yeah. Let me five minutes break. Yeah. If you want to.
00:30:36All right. Very cool. Yeah.
00:30:48Yeah, my body is acclimated to the colder weather over the week. So, I'm not cold anymore.
00:30:58No.
00:31:18Okay.
00:31:38Okay.
00:32:06Okay.
00:32:34Okay.
00:33:02Okay.
00:33:30Okay.
00:33:58Okay.
00:34:26Okay.
00:34:57Okay.
00:35:11My apologies. Actually, the kind of definition to be used to prove this theorem, this conjecture,
00:35:21is neither of these. Okay. It's more like, well, it's more like this.
00:35:40Slash x is one minus colleagues. Okay.
00:35:47Yeah. Yeah. Using this will be a lot easier than this. Okay. So, now, I give you more minutes. Okay. Yeah. If you want to prove this, using this, go for it. Okay. Yeah.
00:36:00Okay. Yeah. Okay.
00:36:11Yeah.
00:36:19Yeah.
00:36:26Okay. Yeah.
00:36:34Okay.
00:36:37Okay.
00:37:06Okay.
00:37:09But, well, I've proven it doesn't taste anything. It's just a tablet. You just swallow it with water. But Alaskan Ginseng Vodka, actually, I taste it. And it tastes so good.
00:37:27Delicious medicine. Okay. Yeah. Cheers.
00:37:35That's good. Okay. You proved it already? Yeah? Let's go.
00:37:47Yeah. Using this.
00:38:00Left-hand side.
00:38:26Maybe it's not that easy, huh? Okay.
00:38:34Well, we need to prove this first. Okay?
00:38:56Okay.
00:39:15Maybe we need to use this. Because it's circular logic. Okay.
00:39:28Cheers. The other one. Cheers.
00:39:38Mm-hmm.
00:39:46Let's try this.
00:39:58Slash X is strictly less than one. It's either zero or less than one. Okay? So bottom of that, zero. Okay?
00:40:28Yeah. It's the same as right-hand side. Yeah. QED. Good.
00:40:42Cheers.
00:40:49And then this is... Using this. Let's say... Let's call this, like, Disappearance Theorem. Okay? Yeah.
00:41:01Kali disappears.
00:41:08Let's call it Shading Theorem. Disappearance Theorem, it sounds too scary, okay? Shading Theorem. Yeah. Kali, Shades.
00:41:22And by complement law.
00:41:30QED.
00:41:33Huh? Good. So we have proved two things. Good.
00:41:46Ah.
00:41:51So... Slash X. Slash... If you do it twice... Or two and... Okay? If you do... Slash, like, even times. Like, two times.
00:42:14But not zero times, though. Okay?
00:42:20Two times, four times, six times, eight times. Okay? It's always this. Okay?
00:42:32Yeah.
00:42:36And it's an integer.
00:42:46How about this?
00:42:52And it's an integer.
00:42:55And it's also more than zero. Okay?
00:43:00And...
00:43:04If you do slash R times. Okay? Like, one time, three times, five times.
00:43:13Then...
00:43:21Do slash X. Okay?
00:43:27And it's...
00:43:31This time, it could be zero. Okay?
00:43:37Yeah.
00:43:40No... Yes. Yes. It could be zero. Okay? Because it's two and plus one. Okay?
00:43:50Booyah! Good. We are building the foundation of fractional algebra. Okay?
00:43:55And it's quite easy, because we're in the beginning stage, low level.
00:44:01And also, we are building the foundation of brand new algebra, fractional algebra. Okay?
00:44:06That's why we have to prove these things.
00:44:08Which is not too difficult. Okay? Yeah. Cheers.
00:44:12Hmm?
00:44:15Good.
00:44:19Time check.
00:44:31I was looking for my magic wand.
00:44:38Yeah.
00:44:41Cheers.
00:44:44Hmm.
00:44:46Czech vodka.
00:44:50Okay. What next?
00:45:04How do you prove this?
00:45:09It's like mathematical induction. Okay? Yeah.
00:45:16We leave that to other mathematicians. Okay? Because it's just too obvious. Okay? Yeah.
00:45:22Let other mathematicians prove this using mathematical induction. Okay?
00:45:26You're not going to...
00:45:33Cheers.
00:45:36Hmm.
00:45:41One more.
00:45:47For curly X...
00:45:51This is fractional X. Okay?
00:45:55It's always X. Curly X. Okay?
00:45:59Given...
00:46:02N is an integer.
00:46:04And N is...
00:46:08More than zero.
00:46:12Oh!
00:46:15Wow!
00:46:29Let's say if I was broken, what to prove next?
00:46:34This.
00:47:04Let's assume everything is positive number. Okay? X, fractional number.
00:47:08N, positive integer. Okay?
00:47:20If you want to prove this, go for it. Okay? Yeah.
00:47:24For now, assume everything is positive numbers. Okay? Yeah.
00:47:30It's already proven somewhere.
00:47:34Like, in Wikipedia, they just say this, but they did not provide the proof.
00:47:39But I guess some obscure textbook proved this.
00:47:42Maybe Concrete Mathematics by Professor Donald Knuth and his friends. Okay?
00:47:47I don't know.
00:47:49So...
00:47:51And I don't want to look for the proof of this, because this should not be difficult to prove.
00:47:56Okay? So...
00:47:58You want to prove this? Go for it. Okay? Yeah.
00:48:01Five minutes left. Thank you.
00:48:03Time check.
00:48:14It's been more than 30 minutes, less than one hour.
00:48:19Okay.
00:48:21Five minutes left. Thank you. Yep.
00:48:23Oh, very productive day today.
00:48:27Yeah.
00:48:29Okay.
00:48:31Very cool.
00:48:36Yeah, how nice, right? Yeah.
00:48:45Beautiful.
00:48:51Okay.
00:51:51Yeah, it's a very obvious statement, but...
00:52:00It's obvious, right? Fraction x, that's like...
00:52:04Fraction part of 1.7, what is it? 0.7, right?
00:52:08And if you add 2, yeah, 1.7 plus 2 is 3.7.
00:52:14What's the fraction of that? Fraction part, 0.7.
00:52:18It's obvious, but to formally prove it, that's another story.
00:52:23Okay, so...
00:52:26Did you prove yet?
00:52:28You don't have to, only if you want to.
00:52:31Yeah.
00:52:33I haven't.
00:52:43Oh.
00:52:48Cheers.
00:53:13Camaraderie in school, at work, important, okay?
00:53:19As opposed to just mechanical, just studying and just working, right?
00:53:24Sometimes some pep talk, small talk, as a human being, to add some humanity.
00:53:32To classroom, workplace, to be more humane.
00:53:37That's very important, once in a while, okay?
00:53:40Okay, yeah.
00:53:43Humans become like mechanized, like studying machine, working machine, not good.
00:53:49And let's add some humor, humanity, moist, okay?
00:53:54Yeah, August, it's kind of a rainy season, it rains a lot, but I like it moist.
00:53:59So that my skin does not get too dry, you know?
00:54:02I don't mind rain at all, I like rain.
00:54:04Cheers, yeah.
00:54:09Positive, okay?
00:54:15Wind, I love wind.
00:54:17Windy days, yeah, it's fun.
00:54:22Cheers, yeah.
00:54:26Mm-hmm.
00:54:33So.
00:54:42It may turn out that we need to prove something, like lemma, okay?
00:54:45If it comes, then we'll prove lemma, just like we did here, okay?
00:54:49Yeah, no problem.
00:54:51Yeah.
00:54:56Hmm?
00:55:00I don't have time in mathematics.
00:55:03You know the definition?
00:55:05All this.
00:55:12Okay, we'll try the definition first, okay?
00:55:32Okay.
00:55:34If it comes, yeah, again, we need to prove a lemma first, okay?
00:55:42The lemma to be proven is this.
00:55:50Distributive law, okay?
00:56:03Yeah, flooring, okay?
00:56:06Bottom.
00:56:19Well, floor of M, that's M, right?
00:56:21Let's call it crawl out theorem, okay?
00:56:29Okay.
00:56:41Yeah, if we can prove that, then, yeah, this will be proven.
00:56:46That's very obvious, okay?
00:56:48We need to prove this lemma, yeah, crawl out lemma, okay?
00:56:51And crawling out of bottom function, okay?
00:57:17The bottom function's definition.
00:57:28Okay.
00:57:35Hopefully, it doesn't have to be circular, okay?
00:57:40Mathematician's nightmare.
00:57:42Circular logic.
00:57:48We don't want to assume something that we want to prove, okay?
00:57:51But, let's try this.
00:58:22Ah, yeah, it does look circular to me.
00:58:27Okay.
00:58:37Ugh.
00:58:44But, at least we know what to do next, okay?
00:59:02How about this?
00:59:11x is equal to
00:59:16bottom x plus fraction x, okay?
00:59:23Okay.
00:59:30So, left-hand side is equal to
00:59:37this plus n, right?
00:59:39So, bottom x plus n,
00:59:44they're both positive integers, for now, okay?
00:59:48Plus fraction x.
00:59:52Okay?
00:59:54Because fraction x is between, it could be zero, but less than one, right?
01:00:02Yeah, this is same as bottom x plus n.
01:00:09This is by definition, right?
01:00:13Let's do it right.
01:00:23I think we got a very nice proof here, okay?
01:00:28Formal proof. Yeah, cheers.
01:00:34It's an art in mathematics, right?
01:00:38Involves creativity, okay?
01:00:40Although it's quite mechanical, too.
01:00:49Yeah, use this, okay?
01:01:19Okay.
01:01:34x is equal to...
01:01:46Yeah, differential of this.
01:01:53Cauchy, okay?
01:01:55Cauchy function.
01:02:01Minus bottom of this.
01:02:18Bottom of that, yeah, this is fraction, yeah.
01:02:28Okay.
01:02:32Yeah, after all the cancellations.
01:02:50Aye.
01:03:10I'm sorry, yeah, I got sign mixed here.
01:03:14It should be minus.
01:03:18Okay.
01:03:33Yeah, these whole things cancel out.
01:03:44Yeah, we proved it.
01:03:47Nice.
01:03:48Very cool.
01:03:50Booyah!
01:03:55Here, actually, we didn't assume that x and n,
01:03:58they are negative or positive at all, okay?
01:04:01We just used a bad definition, so, yeah.
01:04:04Yeah, we proved it, okay?
01:04:06That's good enough.
01:04:08Yeah.
01:04:10Now, I am drunk.
01:04:15Time check.
01:04:22It's been more than one hour, okay?
01:04:23Good, good, good.
01:04:29Let's take five minutes break.
01:04:32Just in case you are interested in this, okay,
01:04:34I will show this to you by adjusting the angle, okay?
01:04:39Let's take five minutes break, and then we'll just go ahead
01:04:42and wrap up this episode and digitization,
01:04:48and then we'll go to Instagram Live,
01:04:50because I have very long, busy, not very long,
01:04:54but very busy day at work, okay?
01:04:56So, yeah, soon we'll go to Instagram Live for that, okay?
01:04:59Yeah.
01:05:00Five minutes break.
01:05:02Okay.
01:05:03Okay, okay.
01:05:06Yeah, making tremendous progress today in mathematics.
01:05:11Yeah, fractional algebra.
01:05:13Yeah.
01:05:14Yeah, five minutes.
01:05:17Oh.
01:05:20Very cool.
01:05:23Oh.
01:05:32Okay.
01:06:02Okay.
01:06:32Okay.
01:07:02Okay.
01:07:32Okay.
01:08:02Okay.
01:08:32Okay.
01:09:03Okay.
01:09:12So, okay, we did enough mathematics tonight, okay?
01:09:16So let's talk about something else, okay?
01:09:18Let's talk about mentorships, okay?
01:09:20So, like, look, like some Wikipedia biography about criminals, right?
01:09:29Yeah, it's a very common story.
01:09:31They did not have good parents.
01:09:33They did not have good teachers.
01:09:36So nobody corrected them, and they did something wrong.
01:09:40So that's why they became criminals, okay?
01:09:43Yeah, lack of education, that's all it is.
01:09:48Simple, okay?
01:09:50So mentor doesn't have to be a teacher or a parent, okay?
01:09:56Yeah, but typically older individual, okay, mentorship.
01:09:59It could be employer, friend, uncle, aunt, okay?
01:10:04Yeah, cheers, okay?
01:10:08Social media is a powerful tool for mentorship because it's international.
01:10:13Like Facebook Live, Instagram Live that I do, right?
01:10:18Yeah, the honky show.
01:10:20Humanology show.
01:10:22Yeah.
01:10:23Yeah, and you can record it, social media.
01:10:27I also record it here in, like, Dailymotion, YouTube, okay, uploaded, right?
01:10:34So, yeah, in the Internet, okay?
01:10:38Yeah, so it's Internet, social media, online streaming services like Dailymotion, YouTube.
01:10:46A great educational tool, mentorship.
01:10:51Yeah, cheers.
01:10:57For those people who do not have benefit of good parents, good teachers, well, no problem.
01:11:05Yeah, we can provide mentorship so that they get advices and guidance so that they succeed.
01:11:19So that they become law-abiding, successful citizens in the world.
01:11:28Yeah, yeah, cheers, okay?
01:11:34Yeah, that's what humanology show is about.
01:11:39It's entertainment, also education, okay?
01:11:43Okay, fantastic.
01:11:46Let's wrap up this episode and then after digitization, we go to Instagram Live together, okay?
01:11:52Yeah, thank you.
01:11:55Yeah, very cool.
01:11:57Okay, yeah.
01:11:59See you later.
01:12:02Oh, one more thing.
01:12:03Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:12:06Social media friends from South America, Latin America, they told us about this empanada.
01:12:14It's like a very traditional culinary art, especially in Chile.
01:12:20Okay, fantastic.
01:12:22Empanada, yeah, I know some Spanish.
01:12:24Okay, so it's like empaneled.
01:12:29I guess it's like a past participle of this verb empanar, okay?
01:12:38Pain, P-A-N-E.
01:12:41Like windowpane, yeah, kind of two-dimensional flat surface, so kind of enclosed, empaneled.
01:12:50Like Chinese dumpling, Asian dumpling, okay?
01:12:53In Korea, mandu.
01:12:57In Italy, ravioli, okay?
01:13:01Okay, yeah, some stuffings enclosed inside of this wheat paste or rice paste, whatever, okay?
01:13:12Yeah, that's a Latin American tradition, especially from Chile, okay?
01:13:16Yeah, thank you for educating us, okay?
01:13:20Enclosed, empaneled, okay, with like dough inside of that, meat, vegetables.
01:13:27So it's like dumplings, okay?
01:13:30So yeah, South America, they have their own version of Asian dumpling, okay?
01:13:34Empanada, okay?
01:13:36Empaneled, okay?
01:13:39Yeah, so yesterday, the Facebook Live, we watched this Chile street food, okay?
01:13:45Including empanada, okay?
01:13:48Yeah, fantastic.
01:13:50Amazing.
01:13:52Thank you for educating us, friends, okay?
01:13:54Yeah, we educate each other, okay?
01:13:56Mutual education.
01:13:58Yeah, that's what humanized school is about, okay?
01:14:00We teach each other, learn from each other, okay?
01:14:02Internationally, okay?
01:14:04Fantastic, okay.
01:14:06Yeah, see you later, thank you.
01:14:07Hasta luego.