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Now, in the spirit of, one must first know the rules to break them, and also; Bob's Quick Guide to the Apostrophe, You Idiots. Let's begin...
At school, this is probably taught quickly squeezed in between trigonometry, and calculus along with boolean algebra
When really it is so easy.... So simple that it should be taught around the same time they are teaching you that 1+1=2.
If you learnt it at school you probably got taught it using all sorts of noodly things such as set theory and the slightly less scary venn diagram.
There's a simpler way to understand unions and intersections.
First
Take your left hand, raise one finger and make it a forward slash
Like: /
Second
Take your right hand, raise one finger and... take a wild guess
That's right a backward slash: \
Ok
Now, cross the two fingers so they form a cross
Which should look like an X
The point where the two fingers cross is the intersection
The combination of the two fingers forming an X is the union of your left finger forming a / and your right finger forming an \
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Ok, at this point if you have a piece of paper and some pens handy we're in for a bit of fun
First draw a forward slash /
Then draw a back slash \
Label one, theory
Label the other, practice
now draw an X
Circle the intersection
Circle around the whole X to circle the union
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Experiment, draw a bunch of lines crossing each other, then circle the intersections
Finally circle the union
Wow. There is a very profound sentence in there. Weird. Syncronicity. :/
ReplyDeleteWhich sentence?
Something I learned from Buddhism and tried to clarify for some people months ago. :/ You must know the rules in order to break them.
Circle the Union.
-- anonymous