You both watch a vSauce video

Image credit User of 阿謙 Kouku YouTube account (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHNssUZfeBCj0DuwqYs9nPQ), CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

You both sit in front of the computer and watch a twenty-four minute vSauce video. It starts to make a lot more sense. It goes into all the details of the set decomposition and how it actually is possible to resample a sphere to create an identical sphere from one sphere. You start to believe that it is possible with the correct math and means of sampling a hamster.

“You get it now?” she asks

“I think so, I forget how great these videos are.”  

What do you do?

I don’t think that’ll work on anything other than a sphere that can be sampled an infinite number of times. That’s stupid, don’t do that!

That sounds really tough and not quite the right application of that paradox, could you explain how you plan on doing that?

Help Sarah.

Watch another vSauce video, there’s one on a Möbius bagel

Published by B McGraw

B McGraw has lived a long and successful professional life as a software developer and researcher. After completing his BS in spaghetti coding at the department of the dark arts at Cranberry Lemon in 2005 he wasted no time in getting a masters in debugging by print statement in 2008 and obtaining his PhD with research in screwing up repos on Github in 2014. That's when he could finally get paid. In 2018 B McGraw finally made the big step of defaulting on his student loans and began advancing his career by adding his name on other people's research papers after finding one grammatical mistake in the Peer Review process.

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