I understand math quite well, thank you. I did trigonometry when I was 11 and got my PhD in math at 23. I've published a number of papers with original math results. And I have been teaching it for more than 35 years.
I also have done all the coursework for a PhD in physics, including taking the PhD qualifying exams.
I understand quite well you *lack* of anything close to a theory of reality. I understand that the formulas your throw up are random nonsense.
Those are impressive credentials. It seems really strange to me that people do not listen to people who have more credentials and experience than themselves. It's like people think they are equal when they haven't done the work. It's like someone who lifts weights at the YMCA competing with a professional weight lifter. If the two are in a room people would just say the other guy doesn't have a chance. Why is the scrawny guy even in the competition. This is what it is like to me with people with brains. I'm a pretty smart guy. But I'm smart enough to recognize when I may be wrong. I'm smart enough to recognize someone else's is way much smarter than I am. I'm not insulted by other people being smarter than me. I just admire really smart people and appreciate their hard work.
I worked with this one mathematician who was top of his class at MIT. His name was MK. There was another guy also from MIT that was hired few years earlier but I can't remember his name. Call the earlier MIT hire X. Anyway, MK was so freaking smart, his intelligence bandwidth was like a T1 and everyone else was ISDN. He was so smart we used to think he was an extraterrestrial here to help us save our planet. So when MK started working with X, X was so depressed, he stopped coming to work. Eventually he was fired. Nobody knows what happened to him. X his whole life had always been the smartest person in the room. But when he faced MK he snapped and could not accept his reality.
One time I had developed an algorithm to solve a problem. I was really proud of it. MK took one look at it, and in 30 seconds gave me another algorithm, ridiculously more superior than the one I came up with. MK's algorithm was insanely elegant and self-referential. It was like a diamond with perfect symmetry. I just dropped my jaw. I ended up using his algorithm. I was just happy I was able to understand something MK was talking about!
It's amazing to me how people are today. Especially in politics. People discount smart people all the time. They think just because they use their own brain they think they are professional weight lifters. The idea people think they are just as smart as smart people reminds me of funny story. I was at a training class one time for a database technology. I became friends with IT engineer. He was a pretty sharp guy. He told me this story he was at work and another senior engineer created website for certain company information. My friend looked at and said to other senior engineer, "You know Jay, there's no way what you are doing is going to scale. It's not going to work." But Jay did not want to hear this. And his bonus depended on getting the system into production. So they delivery the system into production and announce it is available to the whole company. Within minutes the system dies a horrible death from the user load. At which point my friend says to Jay, "Just because you use a toilet everyday doesn't make you a master plumber."
I think Sustainer thinks he's a master plumber of reality when he is just using the toilet.
I'm not sure Sustainer is really sincere. This whole thread may be just artwork to see how long he can string people along in conversation. My evidence for this is when he makes statements like "A+B = child". WTbleep?????