Quote from: Not_A_Sheep on May 16, 2013, 10:33 pmWell duh, I learned the Pi rules in fucking 6th grade dude, Lol if you wanna keep cycling thoughts like that we could also just go down even farther to the molecules of the graphite or ink or whatever we use to draw a circle that fits into the rules of Pi (Thereby making it "perfect") When you go down to the sub micron level of this "circle" You will notice that there is no true circle at all, in fact all the nuclei of the molecules are actively sharing a cloud of electrons, vibrating all around each other at the speed of light. Perfection cannot exist in anyway, except inside the mind. There is no such thing as something being perfect, really. If you lookup some of the crazy shit in quantum physics you will learn that our entire universe is a sort of "hologram" in the way that it exists, and the only way the computer exists right in front of you is because you are percieving it through your multiple senses. Only through are perceptions do we create "the world" we live in. If we were not here to percieve the things around us consciously, then everything we see as solid objects everyday is actually just a bunch of waves of energy all interconnected, denser in some areas then others. But the fact we are here to consciously perceive that is what literally makes up what we know of our universe. There is much more around us then just the "physical plane" we can see with our human eyeballs. Lol I always end up rambling on posts like this =pObviously you felt insulted despite my attempt to not be aggressive. You seem to have missed my point though: "perfect" is a human concept. It exists only in our conceptualization of reality -- it is not an objective standard that one can point to, and as such will vary from individual to individual. Therefore, pi is not "perfect," nor is anything else. It may be perfect *to you at this moment* but that's very different than universally, unequivocally "perfect."... I'm re-reading your paragraph to try to respond, and... dear God your understanding of particle physics is -- well, misguided, quite frankly. We're not a bunch of waves of energy, what you're referring to are the wave functions that describe the probability of a particle being found at any given discrete point in space. That's different than energy. They also sort of are interconnected, but at a certain point they cease to have any influence on each other. For example, a golf ball can be guaranteed to be in a specific place, but an electron generally cannot.The golf ball can because the wave functions from the objects on the other side of the universe make no difference -- anything could exist over there and it wouldn't influence the golf ball really at all. So... is that really interconnected? Sort of, but not really -- we're not all quite as interconnected as you seem to believe.To be honest... I'm not going to bother with the rest of what you said. I'm sorry, but you're wrong. Please read a physicist's description of quantum mechanics next time, not a religious nut's.