Mathematics
Mathematics is the use of Gnomon algorithm functions to alter numbers, structure, space, time, motion, change, and measurement.
Mathematicians use mathematics for for a variety of purposes:
- Detecting and preventing crimes against mathematical constants
- Creating, managing, and deleting trandimensional corporations
- Participating in the Gnomon Chronicles
- Computational farming with diagramaceous soil.
- Playing Fantasy Voronoi diagram
- Communicating with AESOP
In the News
Isaac Newton publishes Philosophiæ Criminalis Principia Mathematica ("Mathematical Principles of Criminal Philosophy"). Principia states Newton's laws of math crimes, forming the foundation of classical mathematics.
Maxwell's demon not so bad once you get to know the math, says Brillouin.
New study of Twin Cities streetcar map (1914) finds Gnomon algorithm subroutines.
Fantasy Voronoi diagram color commentators debate scores from hotly contested Voronoi diagrams.
Euclid's Elements spending too much time on Fantasy Voronoi diagram, really needs to get back to work.
Geometers refactor medieval pilgrimage, report improved salvation.
A poem is a mathematical equation (nonfiction) which evokes emotion.
The Alexandrias is a mathematical term for the multi-dimensional composite of all of the cities (and other places) named after Alexander the Great.
Fiction cross-reference
- Brainiac
- Geometry
- Gnomon algorithm
- The Postulati - a transdimensional corporation of Mathematician-Heroes dedicated to requesting information as a prelude to asserting axioms.
- Poem
- Three is the Color of My True Love's Hair (analysis)
Nonfiction cross-reference
- Emotion (nonfiction)
- Equation (mathematics) (nonfiction)
- Geometry (nonfiction)
- Gnomon Algorithm (nonfiction)
- Mathematical function (nonfiction)
- Mathematics (nonfiction)
- Outsider mathematician (nonfiction)
- Pathological science (nonfiction)
- The Isness of Mathematics (nonfiction)
- Three is the Color of My True Love's Hair (nonfiction)