Ethics, also known as moral philosophy, is a branch of philosophy that involves systematizing, defending, and recommending concepts of right and wrong conduct. The term comes from the Greek word ethos, which means "character". Ethics is a complement to Aesthetics in the philosophy field of Axiology. In philosophy, ethics studies the moral behavior in humans, and how one should act.
Ethics may be divided into four major areas of study:
* Meta-ethics, about the theoretical meaning and reference of moral propositions and how their truth values (if any) may be determined;
* Normative ethi...
@andrewjackson Plus are you really saying it can possibly not be defined by humans... look at all the different religious cultures with different definitions of what is moral
When you're saying 1 + 2 = 3 you are actually talking about the field of real numbers, in which you have defined the addition operator in a certain way. It is a lot more complicated then that
@andrewjackson actually, technically it is math but how does that have anything to do with ethics. Again, you're not making much sense
@andrewjackson actually, in javascript it doesn't, it's a form of logic that has true, false, NaN and undefined. It's quite a nice system of logic. You don't accept that either A or Not A
Here is one way you can do it with iMacros JavaScript scripting.
//declaring the macro
var macroIronMaiden;
macroIronMaiden ="CODE:";
macroIronMaiden +="VERSION BUILD=7500718 RECORDER=FX"+"\n";
macroIronMaiden +="SET !EXTRACT_TEST_POPUP NO"+"\n";
macroIronMaiden +="SET !ERRORIGNORE YES"+"\n";
m...
@andrewjackson you think you see a bigger picture but you're not educated enough on math, philosophy (ethics) or economics to really do. I'm not saying this to belittle you I'm saying this to help you. There is so much reading material on all three of these subjects, go educate yourself.
@IceD don't post your answers here and ask for rep.
First you define the following 0 is a number, also for every number x it has a successor which is marked x+1
This is called induction
Then, you define predecessor, which is the inverse function to successor
Then, you define addition, as x+y is (x+1)+(y-1) as long as y is not 0
So yes, without going to expanding our numbers to be closed under subtraction (Z), under multiplicative inverse (Q) or under limit (R) I can still say that
1+2=3 because I defined it to be worth 3. I defined 3 as the successor of 2, so 1+2 reads as take (1+1)+(2-1) = (2+1)+(1-1) = 3 , all perfectly axiomatic. No ethics or anything like that.
@twiz why? It's something you do once and then know how to do. A math degree starts with axiomatic construction numbers.
@twiz let's play a game, you're writing javascript and you only have two functions, the first one is zero() which always returns 0 and the second one is succ(x) which returns for x the value x+1
now, I'm telling you that succ is a bijection, this means in simple words that for every number there exists a successor and that it is unique.
Now let us define another funciton pred, pred(x) is defined to be the function that holds pred(succ(x)) = x
So pred is the inverse of succ
So, for example, after you defined 4 then pred(4) = succ(succ(succ(0))) = 3
Now, I would like you to describe to me how adding two numbers works, how would you define a function add(x,y) that accepts x and y and returns the value x+y as you think of it.
Let's start simple, your recursive formulas always have two things, a base case, and a recursive formula, what would be your most basic addition operation given access to zero() succ() and pred()
you can also do equality by the way
and of course reference variables, so of course for example function iden(x){ return x;} is a perfectly legitimate function given our tools
if you find it easier to implement with a for loop go for it, just remember you can't do ++ (although x=succ(x) is allowed), no addition. No > or < either
so now we can check for two numbers which is bigger, we can add numbers and we can find the pred of a number. Next thing we want to define is subtraction, however we can't. We have no concept of negative numbers.
Sorry for the silly question guys, but is there is a way to force everything inside a div to show in 50% of it's size? I don't want to go back and duplicate most of the css selectors that I have
notice, we did not initially define the negative numbers, we are changing our definition of pred to accomplish that, we are closing our set of numbers under the subtraction operator.
Here is what I did:
function mul(x,y){
if(x===0){
return 0;
}
if(y===0){
return 0;
}
var a = x;
return (function innerMul(x,y){
if(y===1){
return x;
}
return innerMul(add(x,a),pred(y));
})(x,y);
}
We all ignored the cases where x or y are negative, however, we can explicitly check those and then do (for example if x is negative) -mul(sub(0,x),y)
Next, we'll be defining division, division is the inverse to multiplication and indicates how many times does x goes into y. This time I want two functions dix(x,y) and mod(x,y) where div(x,y) should return the whole part of x/y and mod(x,y) should return the number r such that div(x,y)*y + r = x
basically, mod(x,y) should act as % and div(x,y) should act as Math.floor(x/y). This is, for your general language the way languages with integers do division (like C)
that looks about right, recursively that would be
function div(x,y){
var count =1;
(function idiv(x,y){
if(gt(x,y)){
count = succ(count);
return idiv(sub(x,y),y);
}
})(x,y);
return count;
}
what we would like to do next is to close the integers under division
let us define the rational numbers
a rational number is a number in the form P/Q where P is an integer and Q is an integer
so for example 2/3 is a rational number for P=2 and Q=3
also -5/7 is a rational number for P=-5 and Q=7
the square root of 2 is not a rational number, this can be proven and it's not hard but it is also not very trivial, I suggest that you google that proof on your free time
So right now we have what we call mathematically a field
we define add for rational numbers x,y as add(x,y) = add(A/B,C/D) and we do that by A/B+C/D = (AD+BC)/BD
similarly we define multiplication, subtraction and division for these rational numbers in similar ways that make sense, we have all the tools to define those and it is not interesting algorithmically, you can implement add/subtract/div/mul for them, but it would require no thought or recursion
We still have one last thing to do and that is to represent the rest of the numbers, that is the irrational numbers.
Your computer can't represent an irrational number (like sqrt(2)) very well but can approximate it
no matter what P and Q we take, we can express the square root of 2, or Pi using P/Q however we can get 'as close as we'd like '
For example, 3.1 isn't pi, 3.14 isn't pi, 3.14159265 isn't pi but it's getting closer
the last thing we'll do is close Q (the field of rationals) under the limit operator
not going into how this will allow us by using an axiom called the supermum axiom to show we can represent all numbers but I will explain how we do so intuitively
Let's say our number is Pi, now 3/1 is a rational number, so is 31/10 and 314/100
so we are getting as close to Pi as we'd like by adding digits, the problem is, what does that even mean?
In computers, it doesn't mean much because computers can't represent arbitrary precision very well
It is well defined, @twiz we just built it from scratch assuming only that 0 is a number and the successor function (as well as equality, and other similar stuff) , these are called the paeno axioms :)
We can go on, we can close our field so that every polynomial will have a root (so for example the equation x^2 = -1 will have a solution) it is called the complex numbers.
after we do that, we can define our mul (multiply) function to be much faster using something called fourier transforms
I'm working on a basic roguelike using HTML5 and jQuery, and I've come across a problem.
The way the game currently stands, the system only saves the game state every time the user moves between floors - to minimize overhead. The peril of this is that, if the user gets in trouble, they can simpl...
ill show you something per jsfiddle so you know how its created. jsfiddle.net/UYDfN alot more files are needed but this is the setup which creates a cloud animation via canvas. The thing is just trying to set the absolute position seems to be a little tricky :D
What would be extremely interesting is a HTML5 based audio workstation. Can you imagine in the future everything would work with the browser? Desktop, programs...
Well, I made a JS guitar tuner to have a fiddle around with the web audio API, and realised that it was probably possible to make a little recording tool in JS, so I did