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Libra/Virgo...
Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:39 am
Guest
On Nov 1, 7:48 am, "Ken S. Tucker" <dynam... at (no spam) vianet.on.ca> wrote:
[quote]On Oct 31, 9:25 pm, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:



On Oct 29, 10:45 am, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:

On Oct 29, 1:02 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
My thoughts are already organized.  It helps if an air-head tries to
overcome his biological deficiency and make his best efforts to
understand the subjects mattered.  Staring at a textbook for 40 years
in which he still has no fvcking clue as what a Lagrangian is does not
bode well for his aptitude.  <sigh

Some people trying to understand the nature of science are just
destined to go to their graves unfulfilled.  The saddest thing is that
they don’t even know that they don’t know anything still.  <shrug

Well KW your emotional problems aren't what I had in
mind, rather a organized specification for spacetime,
aka spacetime field, in light of relativity.

LOL, Ken.  The problem is not in my attitude but in your aptitude.
Ahahaha...

You have stared at Weinberg's book for over four decades and have
understood nothing.  Would it be time to move on and find another
source of knowledge enrichment?  Just a friendly advice.  That's all.
There is no need to get all bend out of shape because of your lack of
aptitude.  <shrug

Bobby Benson: [to Klaatu] I like you Mr. Carpenter, you're a real
screwball!
Ken
[/quote]
Results 1 - 10 for screwball! Ken. (0.18 seconds)
Ken Ludwig - Playwright: For the love of screwball and
Shakespeare ...
For the love of screwball and Shakespeare, Philadelphia
Inquirer. Ken Ludwig's new play, opening at the Wilma, mixes a few of
his favorite things. ...
Picturing Justice. Caddyshack: Screwball Comedy or Social ...
Sep 1, 2004 ... Caddyshack: Screwball Comedy or Social
Commentary? by Ken Swift. Caddyshack was not a great cinematic
achievement or a movie of social ...
Ken Ludwig - Playwright: "TWENTIETH CENTURY a timely
screwball ...
If a screwball comedy is the perfect escape when the economy
goes south, what could be more fitting than a revival of a smash hit
farce that greet ... For a screwball at the tail end of the 1930s, Day-
Time Wife has ... When he does get out of bed, Ken occupies himself
with preparing for ...
ladolcescrewball.blogspot.com/
5.
Amazon.com: Screwball Academy [VHS]: Colleen Camp, Kenneth
Welsh ...
Amazon.com: Screwball Academy [VHS]: Colleen Camp, Kenneth
Welsh, Charles Dennis, Damian Lee, Peter Spence, Wendy Bushell,
Christine Cattell, Angus MacInnes ...
www.amazon.com/Screwball-Academy-VHS-Colleen.../dp/6302272505
6.
Ken Ludwig's hilarious screwball comedy Lend Me A Tenor opens a
homage to the screwball comedies of the 1930's, guaranteed to
leave audiences ... Lend Me A Tenor by Ken Ludwig. Directed by Dave
Ebersole. March 13-28 ...
La Dolce Screwball: Day-Time Wife (1939)
For a screwball at the tail end of the 1930s, Day-Time Wife has
less in common with the ... Ken laughs. He promises to get her a
present the next day, ...
A screwball comedy that's misguided | Philadelphia Inquirer |
09 ...
Sep 4, 2009 ... A misguided screwball character study, All About
Steve clearly isn't ... and their producer, Angus (Ken Jeong, the
crazed Vegas mobster who ...
The story of "Screwball Express" and it's crew was written by
the ...
The story of "Screwball Express" and it's crew was written by
the original bombardier, Mr. Kenneth H. Cassens. The book "Screwball
Express" was published by ...
A screwball comedy that's misguided | Philadelphia Inquirer |
09 ...
Thomas Haden Church; Katy Mixon; Kerri Kenney; Jonathan Chase;
Ken Jeong; ... A misguided screwball character study, All About Steve
clearly isn't about ...
 
Libra/Virgo...
Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:40 am
Guest
On Nov 1, 7:48 am, "Ken S. Tucker" <dynam... at (no spam) vianet.on.ca> wrote:
[quote]On Oct 31, 9:25 pm, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:



On Oct 29, 10:45 am, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:

On Oct 29, 1:02 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
My thoughts are already organized.  It helps if an air-head tries to
overcome his biological deficiency and make his best efforts to
understand the subjects mattered.  Staring at a textbook for 40 years
in which he still has no fvcking clue as what a Lagrangian is does not
bode well for his aptitude.  <sigh

Some people trying to understand the nature of science are just
destined to go to their graves unfulfilled.  The saddest thing is that
they don’t even know that they don’t know anything still.  <shrug

Well KW your emotional problems aren't what I had in
mind, rather a organized specification for spacetime,
aka spacetime field, in light of relativity.

LOL, Ken.  The problem is not in my attitude but in your aptitude.
Ahahaha...

You have stared at Weinberg's book for over four decades and have
understood nothing.  Would it be time to move on and find another
source of knowledge enrichment?  Just a friendly advice.  That's all.
There is no need to get all bend out of shape because of your lack of
aptitude.  <shrug

Bobby Benson: [to Klaatu] I like you Mr. Carpenter, you're a real
screwball!
Ken
[/quote]
Results 1 - 10 for screwball! Ken. (0.18 seconds)
Ken Ludwig - Playwright: For the love of screwball and
Shakespeare ...
For the love of screwball and Shakespeare, Philadelphia
Inquirer. Ken Ludwig's new play, opening at the Wilma, mixes a few of
his favorite things. ...
Picturing Justice. Caddyshack: Screwball Comedy or Social ...
Sep 1, 2004 ... Caddyshack: Screwball Comedy or Social
Commentary? by Ken Swift. Caddyshack was not a great cinematic
achievement or a movie of social ...
Ken Ludwig - Playwright: "TWENTIETH CENTURY a timely
screwball ...
If a screwball comedy is the perfect escape when the economy
goes south, what could be more fitting than a revival of a smash hit
farce that greet ... For a screwball at the tail end of the 1930s, Day-
Time Wife has ... When he does get out of bed, Ken occupies himself
with preparing for ...
ladolcescrewball.blogspot.com/
5.
Amazon.com: Screwball Academy [VHS]: Colleen Camp, Kenneth
Welsh ...
Amazon.com: Screwball Academy [VHS]: Colleen Camp, Kenneth
Welsh, Charles Dennis, Damian Lee, Peter Spence, Wendy Bushell,
Christine Cattell, Angus MacInnes ...
www.amazon.com/Screwball-Academy-VHS-Colleen.../dp/6302272505
6.
Ken Ludwig's hilarious screwball comedy Lend Me A Tenor opens a
homage to the screwball comedies of the 1930's, guaranteed to
leave audiences ... Lend Me A Tenor by Ken Ludwig. Directed by Dave
Ebersole. March 13-28 ...
La Dolce Screwball: Day-Time Wife (1939)
For a screwball at the tail end of the 1930s, Day-Time Wife has
less in common with the ... Ken laughs. He promises to get her a
present the next day, ...
A screwball comedy that's misguided | Philadelphia Inquirer |
09 ...
Sep 4, 2009 ... A misguided screwball character study, All About
Steve clearly isn't ... and their producer, Angus (Ken Jeong, the
crazed Vegas mobster who ...
The story of "Screwball Express" and it's crew was written by
the ...
The story of "Screwball Express" and it's crew was written by
the original bombardier, Mr. Kenneth H. Cassens. The book "Screwball
Express" was published by ...
A screwball comedy that's misguided | Philadelphia Inquirer |
09 ...
Thomas Haden Church; Katy Mixon; Kerri Kenney; Jonathan Chase;
Ken Jeong; ... A misguided screwball character study, All About Steve
clearly isn't about ...
 
Ken S. Tucker...
Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2009 5:57 am
Guest
I was tickling KW's clit with a quote from,
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0043456/
(the day the earth stood still)
Ken

On Nov 1, 7:39 am, "Libra/Virgo" <marty.musa... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
[quote]On Nov 1, 7:48 am, "Ken S. Tucker" <dynam... at (no spam) vianet.on.ca> wrote:
....
Bobby Benson: [to Klaatu] I like you Mr. Carpenter, you're a real
screwball!
Ken

Results 1 - 10 for screwball! Ken. (0.18 seconds)
Ken Ludwig - Playwright: For the love of screwball and
Shakespeare ...
For the love of screwball and Shakespeare, Philadelphia
Inquirer. Ken Ludwig's new play, opening at the Wilma, mixes a few of
his favorite things. ...
Picturing Justice. Caddyshack: Screwball Comedy or Social ...
Sep 1, 2004 ... Caddyshack: Screwball Comedy or Social
Commentary? by Ken Swift. Caddyshack was not a great cinematic
achievement or a movie of social ...
Ken Ludwig - Playwright: "TWENTIETH CENTURY a timely
screwball ...
If a screwball comedy is the perfect escape when the economy
goes south, what could be more fitting than a revival of a smash hit
farce that greet ... For a screwball at the tail end of the 1930s, Day-
Time Wife has ... When he does get out of bed, Ken occupies himself
with preparing for ...
ladolcescrewball.blogspot.com/
5.
Amazon.com: Screwball Academy [VHS]: Colleen Camp, Kenneth
Welsh ...
Amazon.com: Screwball Academy [VHS]: Colleen Camp, Kenneth
Welsh, Charles Dennis, Damian Lee, Peter Spence, Wendy Bushell,
Christine Cattell, Angus MacInnes ...
www.amazon.com/Screwball-Academy-VHS-Colleen.../dp/6302272505
6.
Ken Ludwig's hilarious screwball comedy Lend Me A Tenor opens a
homage to the screwball comedies of the 1930's, guaranteed to
leave audiences ... Lend Me A Tenor by Ken Ludwig. Directed by Dave
Ebersole. March 13-28 ...
La Dolce Screwball: Day-Time Wife (1939)
For a screwball at the tail end of the 1930s, Day-Time Wife has
less in common with the ... Ken laughs. He promises to get her a
present the next day, ...
A screwball comedy that's misguided | Philadelphia Inquirer |
09 ...
Sep 4, 2009 ... A misguided screwball character study, All About
Steve clearly isn't ... and their producer, Angus (Ken Jeong, the
crazed Vegas mobster who ...
The story of "Screwball Express" and it's crew was written by
the ...
The story of "Screwball Express" and it's crew was written by
the original bombardier, Mr. Kenneth H. Cassens. The book "Screwball
Express" was published by ...
A screwball comedy that's misguided | Philadelphia Inquirer |
09 ...
Thomas Haden Church; Katy Mixon; Kerri Kenney; Jonathan Chase;
Ken Jeong; ... A misguided screwball character study, All About Steve
clearly isn't about ...[/quote]
 
Koobee Wublee...
Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2009 10:49 am
Guest
On Nov 1, 7:57 am, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:

[quote]I was tickling KW's clit with a quote from,
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0043456/
(the day the earth stood still)
[/quote]
Ahahahaha...

Mr. Tucker, you don't have too tickle me with a quote from some sci-
fi. The fact that you have stared at Weinberg's book for over 40
years and still are clueless as what a Lagrangian is is enough
tickling me pink. Ahahahaha... Ahahahahaha...
 
Ken S. Tucker...
Posted: Sun Nov 01, 2009 7:18 pm
Guest
On Nov 1, 12:49 pm, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
[quote]On Nov 1, 7:57 am, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:

I was tickling KW's clit with a quote from,
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0043456/
(the day the earth stood still)

Ahahahaha...

Mr. Tucker, you don't have too tickle me with a quote from some sci-
fi. The fact that you have stared at Weinberg's book for over 40
years and still are clueless as what a Lagrangian is is enough
tickling me pink. Ahahahaha... Ahahahahaha...
[/quote]
Can a Lagrangian define "absolute motion" ?
Ken
 
Koobee Wublee...
Posted: Mon Nov 02, 2009 9:23 am
Guest
On Nov 1, 9:18 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:
[quote]On Nov 1, 12:49 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:

Mr. Tucker, you don't have too tickle me with a quote from some sci-
fi. The fact that you have stared at Weinberg's book for over 40
years and still are clueless as what a Lagrangian is is enough
tickling me pink. Ahahahaha... Ahahahahaha...

Can a Lagrangian define "absolute motion" ?
[/quote]
A Lagrangian is nothing but a density to an action. If an action
describes absolute motion, then its Lagrangian is capable of
describing absolute motion as well. <shrug>
 
Ken S. Tucker...
Posted: Mon Nov 02, 2009 11:34 am
Guest
On Nov 2, 11:23 am, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
[quote]On Nov 1, 9:18 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:

On Nov 1, 12:49 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Mr. Tucker, you don't have too tickle me with a quote from some sci-
fi. The fact that you have stared at Weinberg's book for over 40
years and still are clueless as what a Lagrangian is is enough
tickling me pink. Ahahahaha... Ahahahahaha...

Can a Lagrangian define "absolute motion" ?

A Lagrangian is nothing but a density to an action. If an action
describes absolute motion, then its Lagrangian is capable of
describing absolute motion as well. <shrug
[/quote]
Good, then you should provide an example to prove
the physical possiblity of measuring 'absolute motion',
using the Lagrange you know so much about.
Ken
 
Koobee Wublee...
Posted: Mon Nov 02, 2009 10:39 pm
Guest
On Nov 2, 1:34 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:
[quote]On Nov 2, 11:23 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:

A Lagrangian is nothing but a density to an action. If an action
describes absolute motion, then its Lagrangian is capable of
describing absolute motion as well. <shrug

Good, then you should provide an example to prove
the physical possiblity of measuring 'absolute motion',
using the Lagrange you know so much about.
[/quote]
Coming up with that stupid request reflects your lack of understanding
of what a Lagrangian is. Oh, well. As yours truly had said before,
some ignorant folks are better to go to their graves without
understanding anything even if they really don't know anything. Some
ungifted are meant to be left behind, and life moves on. <shrug>

Ken, you are still tickling me with your clownish achievement in
life. After 40 years of staring at a book by a Nobel Laureate, you
still have no idea what a Lagrangian is. I wish you will stop
tickling me, but it is only a wish. The fact is that you will tickle
me until the very end. It is better for all of us that way. Remember
some ungifted are meant to be left behind. <shrug>
 
Ahmed Ouahi, Architect...
Posted: Tue Nov 03, 2009 11:50 am
Guest
" There is no branch of mathematics, however abstract, which may not some
day be applied to phenomena of the real world. "
-- Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky

Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky
http://www.stetson.edu/~efriedma/periodictable/html/Yb.html

Nikolai Lobachevsky
http://www.viswiki.com/en/Nikolai_Lobachevsky

Hyperbolic geometry
http://www.viswiki.com/en/Hyperbolic_geometry


--
Ahmed Ouahi, Architect
Best Regards!


"Koobee Wublee" <koobee.wublee at (no spam) gmail.com> kirjoitti
viestissä:fd82a252-0650-4797-9402-2d64994a3688 at (no spam) 15g2000yqy.googlegroups.com...
[quote]On Nov 2, 1:34 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:
On Nov 2, 11:23 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:

A Lagrangian is nothing but a density to an action. If an action
describes absolute motion, then its Lagrangian is capable of
describing absolute motion as well. <shrug

Good, then you should provide an example to prove
the physical possiblity of measuring 'absolute motion',
using the Lagrange you know so much about.

Coming up with that stupid request reflects your lack of understanding
of what a Lagrangian is. Oh, well. As yours truly had said before,
some ignorant folks are better to go to their graves without
understanding anything even if they really don't know anything. Some
ungifted are meant to be left behind, and life moves on. <shrug

Ken, you are still tickling me with your clownish achievement in
life. After 40 years of staring at a book by a Nobel Laureate, you
still have no idea what a Lagrangian is. I wish you will stop
tickling me, but it is only a wish. The fact is that you will tickle
me until the very end. It is better for all of us that way. Remember
some ungifted are meant to be left behind. <shrug[/quote]
 
Ken S. Tucker...
Posted: Tue Nov 03, 2009 4:51 pm
Guest
On Nov 3, 12:39 am, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
[quote]On Nov 2, 1:34 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:

On Nov 2, 11:23 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
A Lagrangian is nothing but a density to an action. If an action
describes absolute motion, then its Lagrangian is capable of
describing absolute motion as well. <shrug

Good, then you should provide an example to prove
the physical possiblity of measuring 'absolute motion',
using the Lagrange you know so much about.

Coming up with that stupid request reflects your lack of understanding
of what a Lagrangian is. Oh, well. As yours truly had said before,
some ignorant folks are better to go to their graves without
understanding anything even if they really don't know anything. Some
ungifted are meant to be left behind, and life moves on. <shrug

Ken, you are still tickling me with your clownish achievement in
life. After 40 years of staring at a book by a Nobel Laureate, you
still have no idea what a Lagrangian is. I wish you will stop
tickling me, but it is only a wish. The fact is that you will tickle
me until the very end. It is better for all of us that way. Remember
some ungifted are meant to be left behind. <shrug
[/quote]
Is that a sissy rant saying the problem frustrates you?
(Hint: learn a covariant derivative).
Ken
 
Koobee Wublee...
Posted: Wed Nov 04, 2009 9:43 pm
Guest
On Nov 3, 6:51 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" < wrote:
[quote]On Nov 3, 12:39 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:

Coming up with that stupid request reflects your lack of understanding
of what a Lagrangian is. Oh, well. As yours truly had said before,
some ignorant folks are better to go to their graves without
understanding anything even if they really don't know anything. Some
ungifted are meant to be left behind, and life moves on. <shrug

Ken, you are still tickling me with your clownish achievement in
life. After 40 years of staring at a book by a Nobel Laureate, you
still have no idea what a Lagrangian is. I wish you will stop
tickling me, but it is only a wish. The fact is that you will tickle
me until the very end. It is better for all of us that way. Remember
some ungifted are meant to be left behind. <shrug

Is that a sissy rant saying the problem frustrates you?
[/quote]
Not at all, I am amazed at your gross ignorance. How can anyone with
an IQ of at least 60 not able to understand anything from a book that
he had been staring at for over 40 years? Gee! Correct me if I am
wrong that 40 years represent a long time. <shrug>

[quote](Hint: learn a covariant derivative).
[/quote]
You should understand how the covariant derivative was defined, what
application it covers, and when to properly apply that man-made
mathematical operator. I don't expect you have any clues as what I am
talking about. So, please get lost and go back to stare at your
Weinberg book. <shrug>
 
Ahmed Ouahi, Architect...
Posted: Thu Nov 05, 2009 6:55 am
Guest
Differential Geometry
http://video.google.com/videosearch?sourceid=navclient&hl=fi&rlz=1T4ADBF_fiFI258FI262&q=Differential+geometry&um=1&ie=UTF-8&ei=67rySoyGGoPW-Qbbn5yqBA&sa=X&oi=video_result_group&ct=title&resnum=4&ved=0CB0QqwQwAw#

Differential Geometry
http://www.math.niu.edu/~rusin/known-math/index/53-XX.html

Differential Geometry - Dynamical Systems
http://www.mathem.pub.ro/dgds/


--
Ahmed Ouahi, Architect
Best Regards!


"Koobee Wublee" <koobee.wublee at (no spam) gmail.com> kirjoitti
viestissä:2a7aa1bd-8251-483f-923c-803f9c5d8fca at (no spam) d21g2000yqn.googlegroups.com...
[quote]On Nov 3, 6:51 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" < wrote:
On Nov 3, 12:39 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:

Coming up with that stupid request reflects your lack of understanding
of what a Lagrangian is. Oh, well. As yours truly had said before,
some ignorant folks are better to go to their graves without
understanding anything even if they really don't know anything. Some
ungifted are meant to be left behind, and life moves on. <shrug

Ken, you are still tickling me with your clownish achievement in
life. After 40 years of staring at a book by a Nobel Laureate, you
still have no idea what a Lagrangian is. I wish you will stop
tickling me, but it is only a wish. The fact is that you will tickle
me until the very end. It is better for all of us that way. Remember
some ungifted are meant to be left behind. <shrug

Is that a sissy rant saying the problem frustrates you?

Not at all, I am amazed at your gross ignorance. How can anyone with
an IQ of at least 60 not able to understand anything from a book that
he had been staring at for over 40 years? Gee! Correct me if I am
wrong that 40 years represent a long time. <shrug

(Hint: learn a covariant derivative).

You should understand how the covariant derivative was defined, what
application it covers, and when to properly apply that man-made
mathematical operator. I don't expect you have any clues as what I am
talking about. So, please get lost and go back to stare at your
Weinberg book. <shrug

[/quote]
 
Ken S. Tucker...
Posted: Thu Nov 05, 2009 12:20 pm
Guest
On Nov 4, 11:43 pm, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
[quote]On Nov 3, 6:51 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" < wrote:

On Nov 3, 12:39 am, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Coming up with that stupid request reflects your lack of understanding
of what a Lagrangian is. Oh, well. As yours truly had said before,
some ignorant folks are better to go to their graves without
understanding anything even if they really don't know anything. Some
ungifted are meant to be left behind, and life moves on. <shrug

Ken, you are still tickling me with your clownish achievement in
life. After 40 years of staring at a book by a Nobel Laureate, you
still have no idea what a Lagrangian is. I wish you will stop
tickling me, but it is only a wish. The fact is that you will tickle
me until the very end. It is better for all of us that way. Remember
some ungifted are meant to be left behind. <shrug

Is that a sissy rant saying the problem frustrates you?

Not at all, I am amazed at your gross ignorance. How can anyone with
an IQ of at least 60 not able to understand anything from a book that
he had been staring at for over 40 years? Gee! Correct me if I am
wrong that 40 years represent a long time. <shrug

(Hint: learn a covariant derivative).

You should understand how the covariant derivative was defined, what
application it covers, and when to properly apply that man-made
mathematical operator. I don't expect you have any clues as what I am
talking about. So, please get lost and go back to stare at your
Weinberg book. <shrug
[/quote]
Excuse me KW girl, this is my thread, you brought up the
Lagrangian, then you whine about being incompetent to apply
it to the problem. Girl, you need help.
Ken
 
Koobee Wublee...
Posted: Thu Nov 05, 2009 10:00 pm
Guest
On Nov 5, 2:20 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:
[quote]On Nov 4, 11:43 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:

Not at all, I am amazed at your gross ignorance. How can anyone with
an IQ of at least 60 not able to understand anything from a book that
he had been staring at for over 40 years? Gee! Correct me if I am
wrong that 40 years represent a long time. <shrug

You should understand how the covariant derivative was defined, what
application it covers, and when to properly apply that man-made
mathematical operator. I don't expect you have any clues as what I am
talking about. So, please get lost and go back to stare at your
Weinberg book. <shrug

Excuse me KW girl,
[/quote]
You can call me whatever you want. <shrug>

[quote]this is my thread,
[/quote]
You want discussions, right?

[quote]you brought up the
Lagrangian,
[/quote]
That is because you still have not understood the basics. <shrgu>

[quote]then you whine about being incompetent to apply
it to the problem.
[/quote]
Hey, Ken. You are the one who has stared at your heroic book by
Weinberg for over 4 decades and still are clueless to what a
Lagrangian is. It remains your problem, not mine. Understand the
basic issue here?

[quote]Girl, you need help.
[/quote]
LOL. Logic tells me that it is the one who has stared at a textbook
for over 4 decades and still is clueless to what a Lagrangian is needs
help. <shrug> It comes to mind that you are that one. <shrug> This
is reality indicating your problem only. Calling me names would not
solve your problem. <shrug> When are you going to realize the
reality?
 
Ken S. Tucker...
Posted: Fri Nov 06, 2009 9:27 am
Guest
On Nov 6, 12:00 am, Koobee Wublee <koobee.wub... at (no spam) gmail.com> wrote:
[quote]On Nov 5, 2:20 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:

On Nov 4, 11:43 pm, Koobee Wublee wrote:
Not at all, I am amazed at your gross ignorance. How can anyone with
an IQ of at least 60 not able to understand anything from a book that
he had been staring at for over 40 years? Gee! Correct me if I am
wrong that 40 years represent a long time. <shrug

You should understand how the covariant derivative was defined, what
application it covers, and when to properly apply that man-made
mathematical operator. I don't expect you have any clues as what I am
talking about. So, please get lost and go back to stare at your
Weinberg book. <shrug

Excuse me KW girl,

You can call me whatever you want. <shrug
[/quote]
Well you mentioned you're female, your handle is fem,
and your post are quite fem.

[quote]this is my thread,

You want discussions, right?
[/quote]
Yes, but please don't take your bedroom problems out
on me, find a boyfriend.
Ken
[...OOT]
 
 
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