A = dx + ey - z^3 true or false? — flannel jesus
Also you're wrong about what the e means, it doesn't mean kinetic plus potential. — flannel jesus
kinetic and potential energy, dude. In Newtonian terms. It's super simple. You already know this. — Arcane Sandwich
kinetic and potential energy, dude. In Newtonian terms. It's super simple. You already know this. — Arcane Sandwich
You didn't say that it does? Are you kidding? — flannel jesus
Also you're wrong about what the e means, it doesn't mean kinetic plus potential. — flannel jesus
↪Arcane Sandwich
and, plus, this seems pedantic to me. — flannel jesus
Either way you phrase it is equally incorrect. — flannel jesus
I don't know what "and" could possibly mean other than plus in this context anyway. — flannel jesus
↪Arcane Sandwich
originally I just wanted to know if it was meaningful to you, beyond just a bunch of symbols you've been told are "true" when you put them in that order. — flannel jesus
Through much deliberation, I think I've discovered the answer. — flannel jesus
↪Arcane Sandwich
how does that apply to a numerical value that you get for e from Einstein's equation? "This numerical value is equal to kinetic AND potential energy"? — flannel jesus
Do you mean e equals the kinetic energy, and also separately it equals the potential energy? — flannel jesus
That would imply kinetic energy is always equal to potential energy, which is just simply not true, so I didn't think you could possibly mean that. — flannel jesus
Plus seemed like a more reasonable interpretation, I was trying to be charitable with that. — flannel jesus
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