Jiskefet wrote:Coleon wrote:MeathookSodomy wrote:No.
Every problem creates a new invention.
i think this sums it up best
But not every invention was a problem before, yet can create one.
Actually, Necessity is the mother of invention.
Jiskefet wrote:Coleon wrote:MeathookSodomy wrote:No.
Every problem creates a new invention.
i think this sums it up best
But not every invention was a problem before, yet can create one.
Jiskefet wrote:We are close to answering the main question here I think guys...
"Yes. Every invention does create a new problem. If not the concequences of the invention itself create the problem, the inventors of it never being satisfied with what they invented do."
Are we getting somewhere here?
GoodGirlsGetGutted wrote:Jiskefet wrote:We are close to answering the main question here I think guys...
"Yes. Every invention does create a new problem. If not the concequences of the invention itself create the problem, the inventors of it never being satisfied with what they invented do."
Are we getting somewhere here?
Think of it like a mathematical equation
Let x=any problem
Let y=any solution
This is the equation:
x+y=y+x
So:
(problem)+(solution to problem)=(solution created)+(new problem)
Since x+y=y+x with a 100% probability rate, x+y=y+x becomes a mathematical law
If the equation x+y=y+x were to be graphed, its representative would be a line with no origin, stretching past infinity on a plane.
So it's a neverending cycle that works both ways, or else the equation will deviate and a constant could not be decided.
So the answer is yes, but that's only half of the full equation, the other half being the inverse of your thesis.
Make sense?
GoodGirlsGetGutted wrote:Jiskefet wrote:We are close to answering the main question here I think guys...
"Yes. Every invention does create a new problem. If not the concequences of the invention itself create the problem, the inventors of it never being satisfied with what they invented do."
Are we getting somewhere here?
Think of it like a mathematical equation
Let x=any problem
Let y=any solution
This is the equation:
x+y=y+x
So:
(problem)+(solution to problem)=(solution created)+(new problem)
Since x+y=y+x with a 100% probability rate, x+y=y+x becomes a mathematical law
If the equation x+y=y+x were to be graphed, its representative would be a line with no origin, stretching past infinity on a plane.
So it's a neverending cycle that works both ways, or else the equation will deviate and a constant could not be decided.
So the answer is yes, but that's only half of the full equation, the other half being the inverse of your thesis.
Make sense?
Menzo wrote:Its cuz you're dope and Daddy Dubs. No one fucks with that
I love you Daren
Coleon wrote:emzee-frenzy wrote:an invention that has brought nothing but good and is bringing it every day is the Hubble telescope, with it we can see stars and galaxies millions of light-years away.
lol for 3 billion dollars we can have an invention without a problem
Jiskefet wrote:Coleon wrote:emzee-frenzy wrote:an invention that has brought nothing but good and is bringing it every day is the Hubble telescope, with it we can see stars and galaxies millions of light-years away.
lol for 3 billion dollars we can have an invention without a problem
And the 3 billion dollars beiing the problem at the same time...
Menzo wrote:Its cuz you're dope and Daddy Dubs. No one fucks with that
I love you Daren
Solace wrote:Oh stop your making me blush
emzee-frenzy wrote:an invention that has brought nothing but good and is bringing it every day is the Hubble telescope, with it we can see stars and galaxies millions of light-years away.
GoodGirlsGetGutted wrote:emzee-frenzy wrote:an invention that has brought nothing but good and is bringing it every day is the Hubble telescope, with it we can see stars and galaxies millions of light-years away.
Past servicing missions have exchanged old instruments for new ones, both avoiding failure and making possible new types of science. Without servicing missions, all of the instruments will eventually fail.
Hubble orbits the Earth in the extremely tenuous upper atmosphere, and over time its orbit decays due to drag. If it is not re-boosted by a shuttle or other means, it will re-enter the Earth's atmosphere sometime between 2019 and 2032, with the exact date depending on how active the Sun is and its impact on the upper atmosphere.
The problem lies in its maintainence.
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