Then a better symbol would be a surveyor’s theodolite, maybe with a map (or paper), a ruler, and a drafting compass.
I’ve also suggested a balance scale (decision theory) with an urn full of colored balls (Bayesian inference). Another symbol could be a locket (something to protect).
I’m kinda partial to the black flowing robe filled with intricate, silver-colored mathematical equations, myself. But that might be a bit elaborate for everyday use.
If you’re willing to pay some extra for having it handmade, there are plenty of people who would be ready to make you one.
(And now that you brought it up, you made me semi-seriously consider actually getting one made. I have a bunch of friends and friends of friends who have cosplay as a hobby, so I might be able to get it cheaper than by going through a professional. Hmm… then I’d only need to decide on the equations I wanted on it.)
I have a half-face mask along those lines made for me by an ex-girlfriend. Sadly, she was not a mathematician, so the specific formulae aren’t of much interest. Nice to have for the occasional costumed ball, though.
I met a bloke once who had Euclid’s proof of Pythagoras’ theorem tattooed on his arm, and got into a drunken argument with him about whether or not he should have chosen a more elegant proof.
I’m really tempted to make funny/silly T-shirts along the lines of
The anthropic principle says that the conditional probability that you are in a universe that allows reading at the moment is 1.*
T-shirts with one or two boxes on to indicate how you would play with Omega.
*At least according to Jurgen Schmidhuber via wikipedia because a universe where you can’t read the t-shirt is inconsistent with reading the t-shirt. Yes it is a bit weak, but it is the best Anthropic principle joke I could come up with late at night.
I’m coming a long.
Great. Maybe all LW’ers should wear some distinguishing mark, like a Map stuck to their clothes?
Then a better symbol would be a surveyor’s theodolite, maybe with a map (or paper), a ruler, and a drafting compass.
I’ve also suggested a balance scale (decision theory) with an urn full of colored balls (Bayesian inference). Another symbol could be a locket (something to protect).
I’m kinda partial to the black flowing robe filled with intricate, silver-colored mathematical equations, myself. But that might be a bit elaborate for everyday use.
Awesome. Where do I buy one?
If you’re willing to pay some extra for having it handmade, there are plenty of people who would be ready to make you one.
(And now that you brought it up, you made me semi-seriously consider actually getting one made. I have a bunch of friends and friends of friends who have cosplay as a hobby, so I might be able to get it cheaper than by going through a professional. Hmm… then I’d only need to decide on the equations I wanted on it.)
I have a half-face mask along those lines made for me by an ex-girlfriend. Sadly, she was not a mathematician, so the specific formulae aren’t of much interest. Nice to have for the occasional costumed ball, though.
I met a bloke once who had Euclid’s proof of Pythagoras’ theorem tattooed on his arm, and got into a drunken argument with him about whether or not he should have chosen a more elegant proof.
Go LW T-shirts!
They design themselves.
On the front of the t-shirt on the left side you put a paper map with the word “Map” under it.
On the right, you put a 3D landscape (mountains, etc) with “Territory” written under it.
In between those two, you put “≠” (the “isn’t equal to” symbol).
Voilà!
(“Ceci n’est pas un territoire”)
It might be particularly delicious to draw a map with a copyright trap for the illustration.
I’m really tempted to make funny/silly T-shirts along the lines of
The anthropic principle says that the conditional probability that you are in a universe that allows reading at the moment is 1.*
T-shirts with one or two boxes on to indicate how you would play with Omega.
*At least according to Jurgen Schmidhuber via wikipedia because a universe where you can’t read the t-shirt is inconsistent with reading the t-shirt. Yes it is a bit weak, but it is the best Anthropic principle joke I could come up with late at night.
I’ve pondered one that said “Cryocrasinating”
Blue and Green?
I’d buy a one box T-shirt if it was done well. It’d go well with my bayes rule shirt.
I’ll be there. I look like this.