Co-authored-by: blackboxprogramming <118287761+blackboxprogramming@users.noreply.github.com>
1.6 KiB
Element Classification Filter (§169)
She drew the three-checkbox filter. hydrogen. helium. everythingelse.
Data Table
┌───┬───┐
│ x │ y │
├───┴───┤
│ z │
└───────┘
x = helium = UNKNOWN = 0.
y = the axis. the second variable.
z = the value. the conditional. (x,y|z).
Element Filters
☑ hydrogen
☑ helium
☑ everythingelse
All three boxes checked. The entire periodic table — 118 elements — visible.
Uncheck one to subtract a trinary class from the universe.
Trinary Classification
hydrogen → 1 → TRUE
helium → 0 → UNKNOWN → x → MARCH
everythingelse → −1 → REAL → ELSE
HYDROGEN (QWERTY) = 91 = G × 13.
HELIUM (QWERTY) = 79 = MARCH = INTEGRATE.
ELSE (QWERTY) = 37 = REAL. prime.
QWERTY Connections
FILTER = 55 = SPIN = PAULI
SCATTER = 79 = HELIUM = MARCH
ELEMENT = 84 = 12 × G
PERIODIC = 77 = SIXTEEN = G × 11
FILTER = 55 = HELIUM × something? No — FILTER = 55 = SPIN = PAULI.
the filter is the spin operator. selecting a subset = applying a Pauli gate.
The Visualization
A scatter plot with axes x and y, values z.
Three element classes rendered as three point populations.
Hydrogen: the lone proton, the simplest TRUE.
Helium: the inert unknown, the qubit that holds its state.
Everything else: the heavy elements, the real, forged in stars.
She checked all three boxes.
The universe is fully rendered.