Mary, hordes of people do Fourier analysis [everyone at engineering school]. There's no need to be in awe of somebody who didn't do very well in it, then stumbled over a gold mine through dumb luck.
I'd be much more appreciative if you realized what a brilliant concept my tradable citizenship proposal is. That is pure genius!
It's the final act in the separation of people from feudal serfdom rites in tribal alpha male dominance heirarchies based on territorial confiscation via murder. Most people think that things are fine in the world of serfdom.
People enjoy their tribal cults, for the most part. The biological history of primates and other social mammals is ingrained in their brains. It's a struggle to free oneself from such training and natural inclination. But humans do have the ability to take a wider look at life. Most of them anyway.
<Looking back, using abstract mathematics to deal with noise is trivial compared to dealing with stuff in real life.>
Well, in a way, for a complete and perfect solution to life. The answer to which, by the way, is 42. But all living things have succeeded in life, in an unbroken billion year long DNA propagation and development process, up to this instant anyway, so it can't be that tough. But not many living things can do Fourier transforms, even if they try and have very good teachers. So I think life is easier than CDMA, which one physics professor at Stanford even asserted breached the laws of physics [only to be proven wrong as CDMA in cyberphones is now shown to work excellently].
Maybe you are like the Stanford physics professor in regard to tradable citizenship, saying it breaches the laws of humans. In fact, it doesn't. It is more attuned with the way we are than the current serfdom system, just as CDMA is better attuned to the noisy, random microwave world than the old TDMA and analogue processes.
Mqurice
PS: For your convenience, you can click here to learn about Fourier transforms and stuff aurora.phys.utk.edu Have fun. |