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nonmathematical การใช้

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  • The exhibition has several demonstrations that nonmathematical intuition can be wrong.
  • Even nonmathematical readers might know his book with Shephard on tilings .---CH 09 : 03, 26 June 2006 ( UTC)
  • "Emblems of Mind " is graced by several splendid attempts to help nonmathematical readers experience something of what mathematical creativity feels like from the inside.
  • He deepens our appreciation of their discoveries by linking them to the equally deep, nonmathematical musings of the Kabalists, for whom infinity was a mystical equivalent to the immensity of God.
  • The absence in this thesis of clear distinction between mathematical and nonmathematical " creation " leaves open the inference that it applies to allegedly creative endeavors in art, music, and literature.
  • Smoothly integrates the flow of material in a nonmathematical format without sacrificing depth of coverage or accuracy to help readers grasp more complex concepts and gain a more thorough understanding of the principles of electronics.
  • This way of thinking about politics, Havelock concluded, could not be used as a model for understanding or shaping inherently nonmathematical interactions : " The stuff of human politics is conflict and compromise ."
  • "Con Air " : convicts on an airplane . ( " Do the math, " as one character inevitably says about something nonmathematical, using the season's best-loved cliche .)
  • Economics, practical, nonmathematical economics, is increasingly practiced by lawyers and by people trained at graduate business schools or at public policy institutes _ training that belongs in the graduate schools that " license " economists.
  • His monograph " Tilings and Patterns ", coauthored with G . C . Shephard, helped to rejuvenate interest in this classic field, and has proved popular with nonmathematical audiences, as well as with mathematicians.
  • It was the unique accomplishment of the Greeks ( no other great civilization came close ), with Euclidean geometry providing the exemplar for the power of deductive knowledge and Aristotle's " Organon " completing the application of logic to nonmathematical thought.
  • In 1984, the Oxford physical chemist Peter Atkins, in a book " The Second Law ", written for laypersons, presented a nonmathematical interpretation of what he called the " infinitely incomprehensible entropy " in simple terms, describing the Second Law of thermodynamics as " energy tends to disperse ".
  • According to official Latter-day Saint teaching, the Father, Son, and Spirit are three ontologically separate, self-aware entities who share a common " God " nature distinct from our " human " nature, who are " One God " in a nonmathematical sense ( just as a husband and wife are supposed to be " one " in a nonmathematical sense ).
  • According to official Latter-day Saint teaching, the Father, Son, and Spirit are three ontologically separate, self-aware entities who share a common " God " nature distinct from our " human " nature, who are " One God " in a nonmathematical sense ( just as a husband and wife are supposed to be " one " in a nonmathematical sense ).
  • The book describes the 17th century English exploration of the Americas, the early exploration by English mathematicians of infinitesimals, and the relationship between the two, and argued that " If a strong relationship can be established between an historically specific nonmathematical tale and the narrative of a mathematical work that originated within its social sphere, then mathematics can indeed be said to be fundamentally shaped by its social and cultural setting ."