humanology 2081.1 .

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Transcript
00:00Hello friends, yeah, welcome back. We are back. Welcome to Humanology, uh,
00:132081.1. Sure. Yeah, I mean, during the Zoom software, I need to convert this to video,
00:23right? I just call it digitization. Okay, so conversion process. Yeah, during that time,
00:29yeah, I, uh, checked this formula and it worked. Okay, yeah, like, uh, how many examples? Like
00:41five examples. Okay, six examples. It worked. It checked out. Okay, so tomorrow we'll, uh,
00:50check the veracity of this formula, but it seemed to be working magically. Okay, so
00:59yeah, it seemed to be a correct formula. Okay, better than like five, four, six examples. Okay,
01:05yeah. Okay, good.
01:15And there are only four terms here, so we do not need to express with sigma, okay? I'd love to,
01:23but it won't work because we have k, k, 2k, 2k. Okay, so I don't know.
01:38But it's not obvious to me to contact this
01:42as a sigma, okay? I don't think it will work, okay? But
01:55uh, we can,
02:02I don't know, maybe two sigmas, two separate sigmas, each of them two terms.
02:06Maybe.
02:13But I don't think it's necessary. A sigma, that in mathematics, is like summation, right? Yeah,
02:21grid letter equivalent. Sigma is like s in English alphabet, okay? It means summation, okay?
02:31Yeah, nowadays, sigma means like a little somebody who's cool.
02:40But that's cool, okay? Nowadays. But in mathematics, sigma is summation, okay? So
02:47there are only four terms, so yeah, I don't think it's necessary to express it as sigma,
02:52and I don't think it will work, okay? But that's fine.
02:57But tomorrow, yeah, we'll look at this again and try to see some pattern here, okay?
03:06I'm curious. Cheers.
03:26Uh, maybe it's possible to simplify this formula, somewhat.
03:49Yeah, because this was twice of that, this was twice of that, you know? Yeah.
03:57You have k plus 0, k plus 3, k plus 1, k plus 2, k plus 3, okay? So there's some pattern here,
04:05okay? So, but it's quite mixed, but yeah. Okay? I'm getting very hungry, okay? So let's take
04:23five minutes break and let's go to Instagram live, okay? And then I may as well just eat some food.
04:30Okay, five minutes, okay? Thank you. All right, let's go. Yep.
04:41Yeah, the latest formula that we discovered. Yeah, nice.
04:46Mm-hmm. Okay.
05:16Mm-hmm.
05:46Mm-hmm.
06:16Mm-hmm.
06:46Mm-hmm.
07:16Mm-hmm.
07:20Okay, let's put this behind us. It was very nice.
07:26So, yeah, I'm a writer. I like it when it rhymes. So, hi, Hunky Lee. Seen any lady lately?
07:37Like, I've seen somebody. It's like dating somebody, right? So,
07:41but last Saturday, yeah, we went to a hotel alone. Yeah, no problem. Watching TV.
07:52Mostly. That was nice. Road trip. Yeah. Day trip. Oh, yeah.
08:02Oh, yeah.
08:06Looks nice.
08:09Change of scene and, you know, breaking out of routine. Yeah, once in a while like that. It's
08:18quite nice. Quite a trip. Okay, let's go to Instagram live together, okay? Time check.
08:32Yeah, it's been like 10 minutes. Okay. Oh, I'm hungry. Oh.
08:50Yeah.
08:55Maybe I eat some of those, like, half with cranberries. Sure, we can do that.
09:01Yeah.
09:06In the vodka. Sure. Good idea.
09:30Hello, friends. Yeah, welcome to
09:39Humanology Instagram live edition. Yeah, welcome. Yeah. Yeah, past hour, yeah, doing mathematics,
09:48you know, making very good progress. Yeah, welcome. Cheers. Happy Tuesday.
10:01Mmm.
10:04Half with cranberry. Nice. Very crunchy. Welcome. Yeah. Good evening.
10:24Welcome, welcome.
10:28Yeah.
10:30Yeah.
10:32That's nice. Yeah, half with cranberry, right? Yeah, welcome. Good evening. Yeah.
10:42In vodka.
10:54Welcome, welcome. Yeah.
10:55Yeah.
10:59I've been waiting to eat this. Half with cranberry. It's like Alaskan native plant.
11:08High in vitamin C and minerals.
11:15Antioxidant.
11:16Oh, and very low in sugar, right? So good. Dietary fiber. Welcome.
11:35I'm not hungry anymore. Okay, some energy there. Yeah.
11:41Yeah. Yeah. Very cool.
11:50Welcome. Good evening. Yeah. Cheers. Happy Tuesday. Yeah.
12:03Welcome. Yeah.
12:04Thank you. Yeah, thank you for your support.
12:22Yeah, in the InSangYum live, sometimes, like,
12:27they do, like, invite friends and split screen, like, half heart there, half heart,
12:33the other half heart there, split screen, okay? It's one charming idea there.
12:40Cheers. Yeah.
12:52Good times.
12:58Yeah.
12:59So, this is an unripe, hybrid cranberry, Alaskan native plant. When it gets ripened,
13:10it, now it's, this one is green. I picked in the, about a month ago, summer. But nowadays,
13:20but nowadays, they turn red, ripened, hybrid cranberry, okay? And the seeds become hardened,
13:30okay? Yeah, difficult to chew, but when it's unripe like this, yeah, the seeds are still very
13:39soft. Yeah. No problem chewing. Oh, how nice.
13:50Wild foraging, right? Yeah. Harvesting edible plants, but you need to study, okay? Because
13:59they're lookalikes, okay? Yeah. Some plants, wild plants are edible. Some wild plants are not
14:07edible, okay? So, you, before you go out there, wild foraging, you need to learn what plants are
14:16edible, what plants are not edible, okay? Because sometimes they look very similar. Mushroom,
14:22same way, okay? Me? Yeah, I study them. Planting. In the internet, with books, right? Yeah, yeah,
14:34so. Let's take five minutes break. Welcome, friends. Good evening. Happy Tuesday. Future
14:44leaders, mighty proud of you. Okay, five minutes. Thank you. Yeah, now I got some energy from
14:50hybrid cranberry. Yeah, they're put in vodka, okay? It's so nice.
14:58Yeah, I'm not hungry anymore. Yeah, that's nice. Okay, five minutes break. Thank you.
15:16Happy Tuesday. Yeah, future leaders, mighty proud of you. Good evening. Okay, five minutes. Thank
15:22you. How nice. Yeah, I always wanted to eat this, okay? So, now it's the time because I'm hungry.
15:34Not anymore, yeah? Good.
15:38Fruits, right? Yeah. Wait, five minutes. Thank you. Yeah.
15:48Okay.
17:03So,
17:34you.
17:54Okay, wait a minute.
17:56So, yeah, botany, the study of plants in biology, right? Yeah, so. Yeah, it's wonderful.
18:11Yeah. Mycology, study of mushrooms in biology. Biology is such a big field, okay?
18:20Yeah, study of birds, ornithology.
18:25Or study of sea animals, marine biology, okay? Or sea creatures.
18:32And study of bacteria, bacteriology. Study of virus, virology. And study of small
18:40creatures that we cannot see with our eyes, with our microscope. Microbiology, okay?
18:51And study of DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid, okay? So,
19:00molecular biology, right? Biology is such a big field. Yeah, and there's also evolutionary biology,
19:07right? And, yeah, study of animals, yeah, zoology, right? Study of animal behavior,
19:14yeah, ethology, right? Yeah. Study of ecosystem, ecology, right? Yeah. Look, I'm very well educated,
19:25okay? So, yeah, I know about that stuff, okay? Cheers, yeah. Welcome to humanology, okay?
19:30So, humanology, yeah, we study human beings, right? But we study other stuff, too, okay?
19:37So, it's more like a human knowledge, humanology, okay?
19:45We study the universe, everything, both physical and metaphysical, okay? Yeah, cheers.
19:52So, in my yard in Alaska, Marshall, Alaska, yeah, I know the names of the plants, like we have
20:04spruce tree, just like, it's kind of like pine tree, okay? The coniferous, sharp, like needles
20:15shaped, evergreen, okay? Yeah. Yeah, welcome, yeah, good evening. Yeah, spruce trees like that,
20:23and, yeah, actually, I have right here, yeah,
20:30spruce tips in the spring, right? Yeah, they're edible, so.
20:35Well, let me tell you some of that.
20:40Well,
20:45well, very minty.
20:50Minecraft is a video game. I don't play video game, my friend, okay? I'm 46, so
20:56cheers.
21:02Yeah, so, in my yard, yes, the spruce tree there, and birch tree,
21:10cottonwood tree, also known as balsam poplar, okay?
21:15And
21:18maybe a little bit redder elder tree, okay? Yeah.
21:24And
21:29some very bearing fruit, like,
21:31Maybe a little bit redder than the tree, okay, yeah.
21:37And some berry-bearing plants in my yard,
21:48Hefecolat, Hybris cranberry, and also red currant.
21:56And...
22:08I think that's about it, okay, so...
22:11Grass? Yeah, like foxtail grass, I think.
22:16I think that's what it's called, okay.
22:19And yeah, dandelions.
22:24This is edible.
22:26Plantain, this is edible too.
22:30And clover.
22:32Yeah, yeah, clover flowers are edible.
22:42Chickweed, yeah, this is edible, but I do not like the taste, though.
22:46Chickweed, too bitter to my taste, I guess, but it's edible, okay.
22:54Mushrooms? Yeah, some bolete mushrooms.
22:58Some boletes are edible, and puffball mushrooms, this is edible, okay.
23:05Yeah, in my yard.
23:08Fly agarics, yeah, they're in my yard, but they're not edible.
23:14They're not, okay, so...
23:18So I weed them out, okay, because they're not edible mushrooms, okay.
23:30Yeah, so it's kind of mushroom season these days.
23:33Autumn season in Alaska.
23:36August.
23:38Oh, yeah.
23:40Cheers.
23:46Mm-hmm.
23:53Yeah.
24:02How nice.
24:04Welcome, yeah.
24:06Good evening, happy Tuesday.
24:08Now, let's say five minutes break, yeah?
24:10Yeah, I need some vocal rest, okay?
24:12Welcome, yeah?
24:14Five minutes break, okay?
24:16Future leaders, mighty proud of you, yeah?
24:18Welcome, welcome.
24:20Good evening.
24:22Yeah, five minutes, thank you.
24:24Yep.
24:26Very cool.
24:28Mm-hmm.
24:36Okay.
28:04Okay, welcome back, we're back.
28:09Yes, so, welcome back, good evening, friends, thank you for joining us.
28:18Yeah, thank you for gracing us with your presence.
28:22Yeah, so, I went out there, my yard, smoking cigarette break and then saw more plants.
28:32Yeah, so, yarrow, yeah, edible plant in Alaska, in my yard.
28:40Edible wild plant and yarrow, very minty, okay, yeah.
28:45Tastes like mint.
28:47Also, like, the pineapple weed, yeah, tastes like pineapple, smells like pineapple, okay, so.
28:53Organic edible, right, and also, like, fireweed, yeah, the edible plants in my yard and fireweed, okay, so.
29:06Tastes like pepper, sometimes.
29:12Even the flowers, yeah, kind of spicy, okay, but the spring shoot of fireweed, it kind of tastes like asparagus, okay, the edible, okay.
29:25Cheers, yeah.
29:31So, I do not mow my lawn.
29:34I don't, I let them grow, okay, and I, sometimes I harvest them, wild plants in Alaska, because I know them, okay, yeah.
29:45Wild foraging, yeah, kind of backyard wild foraging, yeah.
29:53Good stuff.
29:58In Alaska, we have some plants, very beautiful plants, like lupine, like purple in color.
30:05They are not edible, okay, they are slightly toxic, okay, but it's a very beautiful plant, lupine, okay.
30:15Bears eat them, but humans, we are not allowed to eat them, because they are toxic, slightly, okay, lupine, but it's a very beautiful plant, yeah.
30:27But then I'm a yard dog, okay, you know.
30:32But, yeah, there's some other places in this neighborhood, okay.
30:42Not too far away, though.
30:44Cheers, yeah.
30:47Oh, yeah, so, how nice, yeah.
31:02Welcome, friends, good evening, and, yeah.
31:08Also, wild rose, yeah.
31:12Alaskan native plant, wild rose.
31:15It is prickly, but wild rose, rose hips, and rose petals, they are edible.
31:25Leaves, they are edible, too, yeah.
31:35Dating, okay, okay, yeah.
31:37Yeah, focus on education, career development, okay, because think about the universe as a human being, right.
31:48Well, I mean, marriage is not for everybody, okay.
31:54For some people, they are lucky, like my parents, my siblings, my cousins in Korea.
32:03Yeah, they're happily married, okay, have kids, grandkids, no divorce, right.
32:12So marriage works for them, but for others, it did not work.
32:20So some people get divorced, okay.
32:26Yeah, so marriage works for some people, but does not work for others.
32:30It's not for everybody, okay, yeah.
32:34LGBT, yeah, I'm against LGBT ideology, okay, yeah, okay, yeah.
32:43Yeah, so, that's my opinion, okay, yeah.
32:57Yeah.
33:00Because it's not biological, okay, yeah, human being, yeah, there are some animals out there, even plants out there.
33:09It's not like straight, right, some animals, some plants, it's kind of like LGBT, right.
33:16But human species, homo sapiens, we are strictly heterosexual species, okay.
33:27Yeah, but some other animals, yeah, they can switch the gender, like clownfish, okay.
33:35And some animals, like, their reproduction is like, almost like homosexual, bisexual.
33:48Yeah, there are some animals like that, even some plants, okay.
33:52Yeah, some asexual reproduction method, oh yeah, okay.
33:59I know about biology, okay, I studied that, okay.
34:02Yeah, I'm very knowledgeable in biology, okay.
34:05But human being, or beyond that mammals, okay, their reproduction mode is strictly heterosexual, male and female, okay.
34:22Okay, it's science, it's biology, okay.
34:26Welcome to humanology, okay, cheers.
34:33Yeah.
34:36Oh yeah.
34:37Yeah, I mean, sometimes science and politics kind of interact with each other, like LGBT theology, yeah, Democratic Party, right.
34:57Sometimes there's an intersection between science and politics, like climate change.
35:08Yeah, Democrats, they're against climate change, they're against fossil fuel, right.
35:14Yeah, there's some intersectionality between science and politics sometimes.
35:21Yeah.
35:27Okay.
35:29So we gave some highlights to Democrats, let's be fair, let's give some highlights to Republicans.
35:35I'm in the middle, I'm independent, okay, so, but Republicans, yeah, pro-guns, they love guns, Republicans, okay.
35:43But they hate China, well nowadays even Democrats hate China.
35:49I love China, maybe I'm biased because I'm Asian.
35:53I'm from Korea, South Korea, okay.
35:56But, yeah, I mean, Republicans, do they know the history about gunpowder?
36:03It came from China.
36:05Okay, gunpowder, firecracker, okay, it came from China, okay, originally.
36:12I wonder how many Republicans who hate China know the historical fact that gunpowder actually came from China.
36:26I don't know.
36:29Okay, my voice is hoarse, okay, yeah, let's take fire and spray, add some vodka, let's do it.
36:34I don't know.
36:37Okay, my voice is hoarse, okay, yeah, let's take fire and spray, add some vodka, let's do it.
36:41Yeah, welcome to Human Rights, okay.
36:43We are the smartest people, the most knowledgeable people here, okay.
36:49Five minutes, thank you.
36:51Welcome to Human Rights School.
36:53Nice.
36:55Okay.
36:57Five minutes, thank you.
36:59Time check, okay?
37:04Yeah, two times.
37:11It's been more than 30 minutes left.
37:13I mean, it's been more than 30 minutes so far.
37:17Okay, yeah, cool.
37:1930 minutes, thank you.
37:21Very cool, yeah, yeah.
37:23Nice.
43:51And the rest is history.
43:53Okay?
44:02Interesting history.
44:03Welcome to Humanology.
44:04We have a lot of knowledge about it, yeah?
44:08We know of a lot of things.
44:11History, mathematics, science, CS.
44:19Okay.
44:21In China, gunpowder was discovered by a Taoist alchemist who was looking for medicine that
44:35would enable people to live forever young, right?
44:39After the discovery of gunpowder in China, over 200 AD, they used gunpowder for peaceful
44:58purposes like fireworks to celebrate holidays in China, but Westerners learned about it
45:07through trade routes between the West and the East, and later on, they used it for weapons
45:17like cannonballs, cannons, and guns.
45:22That's Western development, or tourist story, yeah.
45:40Welcome friends, yeah, good evening, happy Tuesday, future leaders, mighty proud of you.
45:46Yeah, now let's say five minutes back, yeah, oh, thank you, thank you, yeah, welcome.
45:53Yeah, I need some vocal rest, okay, let's take five minutes back, thank you, yeah, good evening,
45:59thank you, yeah, mighty proud of you, future leaders, yeah, you rule the world, okay,
46:07we love peace and knowledge, okay, fantastic, mighty proud, five minutes back, please, thank you.
46:13Mm-hmm, yeah, five minutes, thank you, how nice, oh yeah, very cool, welcome friends, future leaders,
46:25yeah, mighty proud, yeah, okay.
46:55you
47:25you
47:55you
48:25you
48:55you
49:25you
49:55you
50:06Okay, welcome back, we are back, and yeah, so good evening, thank you for joining us,
50:15yeah, thank you for gracing us with your presence, yeah, so yeah, in classical music
50:24in Europe, Western, yeah, I like this plucking sound of this violin, cello, contrabass,
50:32plucking sound, okay, it's very cool, okay, so yeah, like concerto, yeah, like the
50:43European tradition, okay, yeah, huge fan, yeah, classical music, right, yeah, it sounds very much
50:49like many classical music instruments, sounds like children singing, okay, yeah,
50:59yeah, in human, yeah, pedomorphism, yeah, pedo-aesthetics, you know, the beauty of children,
51:05yeah, many classical musical instruments are like that, like piccolo, okay,
51:10very high-tuned, right, yeah, that's great,
51:12okay, yeah, so,
51:23oh yeah,
51:32like Tchaikovsky, right,
51:35yeah,
51:49yeah, not cracker, right, yeah, Tchaikovsky, kind of Christmasy tune,
51:56Yeah, the Dance of Roses, right? Ah, how romantic.
52:16Ah, great tune, yeah, Tchaikovsky.
52:19Pyotr Tchaikovsky, Peter Tchaikovsky, huge band. Cheers.
52:27Yeah.
52:40Well, I think it's a good time to make a transition to Facebook Live, where we watch some YouTube videos and make some video commentaries there, okay?
52:52Yeah. Welcome, friends, future leaders. Yeah, great to see you.
52:57Yeah, let's make a transition to Facebook Live, where we'll play some YouTube videos and make some video commentaries, okay?
53:04Yeah. Okay? Yeah.
53:06Happy Tuesday. Yeah.
53:10Maybe I'll see you there or maybe I'll see you tomorrow. Thank you. Yeah.
53:13Mighty proud of you, future leaders. Amazing.
53:17VIP, very important people. Let's see you, okay?
53:21Yeah, dream big, okay? Yeah, be ambitious. Thank you.
53:51Okay.
54:13Let's do a selfie.
54:25Selfie.
54:31Sure.
54:48Okay. Yeah, nice.
54:52So let's make a transition to Facebook Live. Maybe I'll see you there or I'll see you tomorrow, okay?
54:58Yeah, mathematics, yeah, we'll get back to you tomorrow, okay?
55:03Good night, yeah, mighty proud of you, future leaders. Thank you.