Raw software makes that trivially easy to do this, and the result is normally perfect. When we click a neutral card in an image, we are saying "computer, I know this spot is neutral, so make it be neutral", and then it does, removing any color cast found there. More about white ...
I hope you realize that I could do so trivially by defining the term "significance" any way I see fit, exploiting yet another fallacy in your reasoning? Aug 4, 2014 #38 A.T. Science Advisor 12,742 3,845 voko said: ...defining the term "significance" any way I see fit......
By "closed curve", we mean you squiggle some line through space in a potentially crazy way and end at the point where you started. We can find four points on this closed loop that form a square. But can we do the same for any loop? If your closed loop is a circle, for example,...
For any natural number , define to be the largest cardinality of a subset of which does not contain any non-trivial arithmetic progressions of length four (where “non-trivial” means that is non-zero). Trivially we have . In 1969, Szemerédi showed that . However, the decay rate that co...
Slightly more non-trivially, the sum set estimate established by Ruzsa, has an entropy analogue , and similarly for a number of other standard sumset inequalities in the literature (e.g. the Rusza triangle inequality, the Plünnecke-Rusza inequality, and the Balog-Szemeredi-Gowers theorem, ...
"But this argument suffers from a logical fallacy: Just because civic virtues must be learned, does not mean they can be easily taught—and still less that they can be taught in schools. Nearly every political scientist who studies how people acquire knowledge and ideas about good citizenship ...
In sum, some readings threaten to make representational hypotheses trivially true, while others threaten to make them trivially false. The challenge is, thus, how to fix a non-trivial middle-ground without begging the question. Table 4 Summary of six readings of “linguistic representation” and ...
Then either x=y (in which case the assertion is trivially true) or there is a net isomerization reaction k\,x\rightarrow k\,y specified by the vector \mathbf {v}. Let \mathbf {m}\in \ker \mathbf {S}^\top. By the definition of \mathbf {v}, we have 0 = \mathbf {m}^\top...
Does it mean Aramaic (which was the “dialect” spoken by the ‘Hebrews’ which are the Jews)? Does it just mean it was written in their style? Does it mean it just has Semitisms? These questions have a potential role in understanding the historicity of this tradition, as there is ...
Presumably there is a sense in which two people could carry out this exercise, with only one of them “getting it right”, and the other “getting it wrong”. My question is what does “getting it right” mean to you? I’m not asking about particular inferential outputs, like point/int...