Originally posted by wendigo100
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Reply to: Insulting Clients
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Previously on "Insulting Clients"
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Originally posted by WageSlaveProbably, but I think I missed that episode. Certainly he played for Fergie during his Aberdeen years.
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Originally posted by wendigo100Is that the same Mark McGhee who was being "groomed" to be Alex Ferguson's successor at United?
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Originally posted by WageSlaveOn the contrary, I think Mark McGhee has done a great job.
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Originally posted by threadedcan't quite see the difference between a "social employee" and a "seagul manager".
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Todays was "network problems" turned out someone decided to reorganise a server room.
1) Wander into random room.
2) Start to unplug everything.
3) Get bored.
4) Wander off.
Hmm, in those terms, can't quite see the difference between a "social employee" and a "seagul manager".
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Owlhoot, well explained.
Threaded, give us an example of social employee incompetence that you have had to deal with.
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Originally posted by threaded...when they get promoted to be Sys Admins...
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Originally posted by AlfredJPruffockAye Threaded
BTW you might recall a recent thread regarding a quote from Jesus, in which you mentioned that the parable about My Fathers mansions had some connection to the system of finite and infinite numbers , could you expand in in Readers Digest terms what you meant as I was interested in your concept ?
Infinite proper subsets of positive integers, for example squares 1, 4, 9, .. can be matched in this way, as can the set of all rational fractions (m/n with m and n both integers), and many other sets.
This bamboozles many people, because many of these sets appear to be either sparser than the integers, i.e. proper subsets of them (the 1, 4, 9 example), or vastly more prolific (in the case of fractions) and include _them_ as a proper subset (1/1, 2/1, ..).
However, some sets cannot be put in one-to-one correspondence with the integers, and Cantor proved that the set of all real numbers was an example.
In the context of Cantor's theory, the "size" of an infinite set is called its cardinality, and the sequence of cardinality for increasing orders of infinity is denoted by the Hebrew letter alpha - The positive integers have cardinality aleph0, the real numbers aleph1, and so on. A cardinality can be identified as a power of the preceding one, e.g. formally aleph1 = 2^aleph0.
For a long while people wondered if this was the complete sequence of possible cardinalities, or whether there were "intermediate" ones. But in the 1960s a guy called Cohen showed that this was undecidable, i.e. demonstrably unprovable using the existing axioms of set theory. But I think most "mainstream" axiomatic set theories in use today assume the sequence is complete.
Not surprisingly, despite being a sound as a bell, Cantor's theory generates more kookery than any other maths topic on the internet (with the possible exception of the endless "Is 0.999.. the same as 1?" debate).
Sadly Cantor himself went a bit loopy in later life, although whether pondering on infinite sets was a contributory factor I don't know. But like Darwin, he certainly faced some hostility and ridicule when his theory was published.Last edited by OwlHoot; 6 September 2005, 10:31.
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Originally posted by insight14You don't need any more money for pies.
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Aye Threaded
BTW you might recall a recent thread regarding a quote from Jesus, in which you mentioned that the parable about My Fathers mansions had some connection to the system of finite and infinite numbers , could you expand in in Readers Digest terms what you meant as I was interested in your concept ?
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Originally posted by threadedWhich, unfortunately, I have to charge for.
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Originally posted by planetitNo it isn't.
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Originally posted by The Late, Great JCReally? How interesting.
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