I'm just having some fun tinkering with the calculator.
The golden ratio (1.618..., achieved by one plus the square root of 5 over 2) has odd relationships with squaring and subtracting 1. I've also noticed that the cube, square and simple value of the ratio subtracted equals zero. No other math sort of thing does this. To ensure the calculator crystals were correctly calibrated, I ensured that 1X1 still came out to 1 (a vital test every calculator user should do before using).
Put on your tin foil hats, ladies and gentlemen; we just proved the totality of a three-dimensional universe with a Ti calculator. We should stop with this multi-dimension garbage and return to physics, math and science for the real world. Eat your heart out Terrance Howard, I'll have Eric Weinstein propping this up in no time.
The golden ratio (1.618..., achieved by one plus the square root of 5 over 2) has odd relationships with squaring and subtracting 1. I've also noticed that the cube, square and simple value of the ratio subtracted equals zero. No other math sort of thing does this. To ensure the calculator crystals were correctly calibrated, I ensured that 1X1 still came out to 1 (a vital test every calculator user should do before using).
Put on your tin foil hats, ladies and gentlemen; we just proved the totality of a three-dimensional universe with a Ti calculator. We should stop with this multi-dimension garbage and return to physics, math and science for the real world. Eat your heart out Terrance Howard, I'll have Eric Weinstein propping this up in no time.


