garmain
No user record in our sample, but garmain has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but garmain has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
Exactly
It's utterly bizarre how people keep scape goating HR. It's the typical situation that whenever HR goes out of their way to make "everyone" happy, no one says acknowledges it. But Management can hide behind "HR" and…
I try my best to NOT stay informed. Like a sibling mentioned: stuff that's big enough tends to creep through one way or another. I am however on top on rather arcane topics that I am very interested in. Twitter curation…
Yes, having studied psychology and neuroscience I get often frustrated how seemingly normal words take on highly specific and often contrasting meanings. Reading article after article and realising that every author…
In German, Dutch I'll use "twenty June twenty-twentytwo". In English "twentieth of June twenty-twentytwo
Seconded. also consider Lockhart's "Arithmetic". Bear in mind. These are both non-orthodox style books. Burn Math Class least orthodox. An orthodox approach to Analysis would be Terence Tao's Analysis books. Further…
Maybe we should. Irrespective of any concerns on the philosophical underpinnings of mathematics, there is an active discourse on the shortcomings of pedagogical resources. See for example Hung-Hsi Wu and his negative…
Maybe. Consider for example Hossack (2020) Knowledge and Philosophy of Number. He indeed lays out a framework in which negative "numbers" aren't considered numbers, precisely because negative numbers combine a magnitude…
I'm curious. I seem to be missing something, because I feel like what you're saying tracks very much with the "alternative interpretation". That is, I don't see the difference (in my mind's eye) at all. Is there maybe a…
Ah. I now see this comment too. I think I understand your other statement about "scientifically supported" better. I have also read the book, and I feel it makes a lot of sense. Like I said in my other post: most…
Dutch: None.
My experience is very similar to yours
Does this mean that tech is inherently the "cool" thing to do? Or that men are less likely to be labeled as a geek, a nerd etc? Or less susceptible for this? The way you put it, it seems to me like somehow these effects…