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Index Entry
Mathematical Symbols:
“Mathematicians . . . erroneously thought that they had attained utter abstraction, or utter nonconceptuality–ergo, ‘pure’ non-sensoriality-- by employing a series of algebraic symbols substituted for by calculus symbols and substituted for again by ‘empty set’ symbols. They overlooked that even their symbols themselves were conceptual patterns and only recognizable that way and that all patterns, for instance numbers, or phonetic letters consist of physical ingredients and physical experience recalls. The physical ingredients consist inherently of event-paired quanta and the latter’s six-vectored, positive and negative actions, reactions and resultants, else they would not have become employable by the deluding, experience-immersed ‘purists.’”
