*Magnify*
SPONSORED LINKS
Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/profile/blog/cathartes02/day/5-19-2020
Rated: 18+ · Book · Personal · #1196512
Not for the faint of art.
Complex Numbers

A complex number is expressed in the standard form a + bi, where a and b are real numbers and i is defined by i^2 = -1 (that is, i is the square root of -1). For example, 3 + 2i is a complex number.

The bi term is often referred to as an imaginary number (though this may be misleading, as it is no more "imaginary" than the symbolic abstractions we know as the "real" numbers). Thus, every complex number has a real part, a, and an imaginary part, bi.

Complex numbers are often represented on a graph known as the "complex plane," where the horizontal axis represents the infinity of real numbers, and the vertical axis represents the infinity of imaginary numbers. Thus, each complex number has a unique representation on the complex plane: some closer to real; others, more imaginary. If a = b, the number is equal parts real and imaginary.

Very simple transformations applied to numbers in the complex plane can lead to fractal structures of enormous intricacy and astonishing beauty.




Merit Badge in Quill Award
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning Best Blog in the 2021 edition of  [Link To Item #quills] !
Merit Badge in Quill Award
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the 2019 Quill Award for Best Blog for  [Link To Item #1196512] . This award is proudly sponsored by the blogging consortium including  [Link To Item #30dbc] ,  [Link To Item #blogcity] ,  [Link To Item #bcof]  and  [Link To Item #1953629] . *^*Delight*^* For more information, see  [Link To Item #quills] . Merit Badge in Quill Award
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the 2020 Quill Award for Best Blog for  [Link To Item #1196512] .  *^*Smile*^*  This award is sponsored by the blogging consortium including  [Link To Item #30dbc] ,  [Link To Item #blogcity] ,  [Link To Item #bcof]  and  [Link To Item #1953629] .  For more information, see  [Link To Item #quills] .
Merit Badge in Quill Award 2
[Click For More Info]

    2022 Quill Award - Best Blog -  [Link To Item #1196512] . Congratulations!!!    Merit Badge in Quill Award 2
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations! 2022 Quill Award Winner - Best in Genre: Opinion *^*Trophyg*^*  [Link To Item #1196512] Merit Badge in Quill Award 2
[Click For More Info]

   Congratulations!! 2023 Quill Award Winner - Best in Genre - Opinion  *^*Trophyg*^*  [Link To Item #1196512]
Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the Jan. 2019  [Link To Item #30dbc] !! Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on taking First Place in the May 2019 edition of the  [Link To Item #30DBC] ! Thanks for entertaining us all month long! Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the September 2019 round of the  [Link To Item #30dbc] !!
Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the September 2020 round of the  [Link To Item #30dbc] !! Fine job! Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congrats on winning 1st Place in the January 2021  [Link To Item #30dbc] !! Well done! Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the May 2021  [Link To Item #30DBC] !! Well done! Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congrats on winning the November 2021  [Link To Item #30dbc] !! Great job!
Merit Badge in Blogging
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning an honorable mention for Best Blog at the 2018 Quill Awards for  [Link To Item #1196512] . *^*Smile*^* This award was sponsored by the blogging consortium including  [Link To Item #30dbc] ,  [Link To Item #blogcity] ,  [Link To Item #bcof]  and  [Link To Item #1953629] . For more details, see  [Link To Item #quills] . Merit Badge in Blogging
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on your Second Place win in the January 2020 Round of the  [Link To Item #30dbc] ! Blog On! *^*Quill*^* Merit Badge in Blogging
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on your second place win in the May 2020 Official Round of the  [Link To Item #30dbc] ! Blog on! Merit Badge in Blogging
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on your second place win in the July 2020  [Link To Item #30dbc] ! Merit Badge in Blogging
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on your Second Place win in the Official November 2020 round of the  [Link To Item #30dbc] !
Merit Badge in Highly Recommended
[Click For More Info]

I highly recommend your blog. Merit Badge in Opinion
[Click For More Info]

For diving into the prompts for Journalistic Intentions- thanks for joining the fun! Merit Badge in High Five
[Click For More Info]

For your inventive entries in  [Link To Item #2213121] ! Thanks for the great read! Merit Badge in Enlightening
[Click For More Info]

For winning 3rd Place in  [Link To Item #2213121] . Congratulations!
Merit Badge in Quarks Bar
[Click For More Info]

    For your awesome Klingon Bloodwine recipe from [Link to Book Entry #1016079] that deserves to be on the topmost shelf at Quark's.
Signature for Honorable Mentions in 2018 Quill AwardsA signature for exclusive use of winners at the 2019 Quill AwardsSignature for those who have won a Quill Award at the 2020 Quill Awards
For quill 2021 winnersQuill Winner Signature 20222023 Quill Winner

May 19, 2020 at 12:26am
May 19, 2020 at 12:26am
#983901
The response to today's prompt is one of those that changes for me pretty much daily.

PROMPT May 19th

If you knew that in one year you would die suddenly, would you change anything about the way you are living now? If so, what would you change and why?


I'm going to give one of my non-COVID-19 answers, because the way I'm living and the things I can (or am willing to) do are, and for the foreseeable future will continue to be, restricted by the presence of the pandemic. So the following assumes that there's no pandemic. Because otherwise the simple answer is "No."

Long ago, I guess right about the time The Empire Strikes Back came out, someone told me that the plan for Star Wars was to finish Episodes 4-6, then show 1-3, then release 7-9. For a while there, it didn't look like it was going to happen. And then it did, and I was, for the most part, disappointed. But I remember thinking, back then, "Okay, after they release Episode 9, then I can kick it."

Well, here we are.

Since that time, I've come very close to death at least three times that I know of. Probably a lot more, given the uncertainties of life. And don't get me wrong -- I'm not suicidal or in any hurry to shuffle off, but I'm done. I've done the things I set out to do, experienced almost all of the things that I wanted to experience, and at this point for me it's all about being comfortable until the end.

It's that "almost" that bugs me, though.

As I noted in a recent entry, I became a professional engineer, and co-ran a business. I've flown an airplane. I went horseback riding in a Central American rainforest. I've stood at the top of the Eiffel Tower, and heard the deep tones of Big Ben from up close. I've written a novel -- three, actually, though they're not exactly in finished form. I experienced a week at a dude ranch in Colorado. I've played poker in Vegas (and lost profoundly) and also blackjack (and won). I've driven across the country and back multiple times. I went to Springsteen concerts, and made a holy pilgrimage to Asbury Park (a few times). I've been to both the easternmost and westernmost points of the continental US, and I've floated in the Dead Sea. I looked out over New York City from the top of the World Trade Center, back when it was two towers. I've sampled Pappy Van Winkle bourbon, and crossed the Golden Gate Bridge (not at the same time). I spent a month on Maui. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. Oh, wait, that last one was Roy Batty from Blade Runner, not me.

But there are still things I want to do: visit Belgium for the beer, Scotland for the scotch, and Japan for the whiskey (there's a particular brand of whiskey called Yamazaki; the 12 year and 18 year styles are available in the US, but for the 25 you pretty much have to go to Japan). I'd really like to take the Trans-Siberian Railroad from Vladivostok to Moscow. A river cruise on the Danube. Iceland. Hell, there are still three US states I haven't been to: Michigan, Nebraska, and Alaska. And I still haven't actually seen the Grand Canyon. If I knew without doubt that my demise would occur in exactly one year, I'd make those things happen (again, barring international pandemic restrictions).

Probably you've noted, as I have, that most of these things, and all of the fuck-it list items, involve travel.

And not a single one of these things will matter after I'm gone, so sometimes I ask myself: why bother? Well, you can say that about anything, and that leads one down a rabbit hole of nihilistic philosophy that I'd rather steer clear of. Everest isn't on my list -- too bloody cold -- but the words of George Mallory (I looked it up and it wasn't Sir Edmund Hillary) resonate with me: "Because it's there."

Hell, if I could, I'd take one of those promised trips to space, just to say I did it. And actually, I want my lifeless corpse to be launched into space when the time comes. It's not going to happen; the best I could realistically hope for would be lofting my ashes into orbit, and even that might be beyond my means. But the idea of being out there, even after death, has appealed to me for a long time, and maybe someday whatever civilization replaces ours would find my remains and go, "...huh, look at that."

No, it's not going to happen.

But I can dream.


© Copyright 2024 Robert Waltz (UN: cathartes02 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
Robert Waltz has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.

Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/profile/blog/cathartes02/day/5-19-2020