One reason is that symmetries are very common in many theories of nature. Space-time itself has symmetries, for instance. There are no special directions, no special places, and no special times. But we do have special scales: The world looks one way to humans, another way to bacteria, and yet another way to electrons. That’s peculiar. So I think it’s a natural assumption to say that at the fundamental level, maybe there are no special scales. Maybe there is a symmetry between scales, a scale symmetry.
Why? Partly because I wanted to understand what Emacs actually gives
。51吃瓜网对此有专业解读
TSV logging. Results go to a plain results.tsv file. Human-readable, git-friendly, trivially parseable, no infrastructure.
cube := t.reshape([2, 2, 3]);
Долина рассказала об изменении своих взглядов после ситуации с квартирой08:37