#hierarchy problem
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
frank-olivier · 9 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Gravity’s Quantum Nature: Uncovering the Secrets of the Hierarchy Problem
One of the most influential theories of gravity is general relativity, proposed by Albert Einstein in 1915. According to this theory, gravity is not a force acting between objects, but rather a curvature of spacetime caused by the presence of mass and energy. This curvature affects the motion of objects, causing them to follow curved paths, which we experience as the gravitational force. General relativity has been incredibly successful in predicting the behavior of gravity in a wide range of situations, from objects falling on Earth to the bending of light around massive objects.
However, general relativity also has its limits. One of the greatest challenges for modern physics is the hierarchy problem, i.e. the enormous discrepancy between the strength of gravity and the other fundamental forces. The hierarchy problem arises from the fact that the force of gravity is much weaker than the other fundamental forces, such as electromagnetism and the strong and weak nuclear forces.
The strength of the gravitational force between two objects is determined by the product of their masses and the gravitational constant G. However, the strength of the other fundamental forces is determined by other constants, such as the fine structure constant for electromagnetism and the Fermi constant for the weak nuclear force. The hierarchy problem arises from the fact that the gravitational constant is much smaller than the other fundamental constants, making gravity much weaker than the other forces. On the scale of atomic nuclei, where the strong and weak nuclear forces dominate, the gravitational force is completely negligible. However, on larger scales, such as the scale of galaxies and galaxy clusters, gravity becomes the dominant force, shaping the large-scale structure of the universe.
The hierarchy problem poses a major challenge to modern physics because it is difficult to explain why the gravitational constant is so much smaller than the other fundamental constants. One possible solution to the hierarchy problem is the idea of ​​extra dimensions, which assumes that the gravitational force is not a four-dimensional force, but a force acting in higher-dimensional spaces. This idea is supported by theories such as string theory and the Kaluza-Klein theory.
In their research, Claudia de Rham and her colleagues have examined the implications of massive gravity theories for our understanding of the hierarchy problem. Massive gravity theories assume that gravity is not a massless force, but rather a force mediated by a massive particle, the graviton. This idea has been shown to provide a consistent and well-defined description of gravity in the infrared range, the range relevant to our everyday experience. In addition, de Rham's research has also examined the implications of massive gravity theories for our understanding of the large-scale structure of the universe. By analyzing data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the cosmic microwave background radiation, de Rham and her colleagues have shown that massive gravity theories can provide a good agreement with the observed data while solving the hierarchy problem.
Research by Claudia de Rham and her colleagues has shown that theories of massive gravity can provide a consistent and well-defined description of gravity in a wide variety of situations.
Claudia de Rham: The Woman Who Broke Gravity (Curt Jaimungal, Theories of Everything, August 2024)
youtube
Sunday, October 6, 2024
2 notes · View notes
sapphicdalliances · 2 months ago
Text
there are so many people who keep @-ing me lately who are obsessed with the idea of WWX being this underprivileged victim who suffered unfairly at every turn…
no, he wasn't a "scholarship kid" in contrast to JC being a trust fund kid, his family paid for him to go to college exactly the same as his brother, where he had the confidence to behave with absolutely no regard for consequences; before the war he carried a platinum credit card with JFM's name on it and he had job security from like age 10 as JC's future head of R&D
no, he was never treated as a servant, he was the HEAD DISCIPLE of a top 5 sect and afforded much of the privilege and respect that came with that. after the war he was JC's right hand, being second in the sect only to the sect leader. even in the burial mounds he never did a single chore and in fact got lightly scolded for creating more chores
he wasn't hated by the cultivation world because he was an uppity servant trying to climb beyond his class and making the gentry look bad through his own integrity and righteousness, he was hated because he was extremely powerful and super scary and violated a ton of social taboos and behaved erratically in public and seemed beholden to nobody
like girl… you're thinking of Meng Yao!
927 notes · View notes
frailgun · 9 months ago
Text
i put on another fancy dress fighting game tournament last weekend, called it Guilty Gala. here's my ramlethal-inspired fit with my doubles partner (we got third!)
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
70 people for this event, a new personal record. when I did this format in the spring for tekken we had a similar if slightly smaller turnout and just under half of attendees dressed up according to the theme. for the strive players it was 95%. i knew I could count on the game who's playerbase is all gay kids and grunglers
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
new england strive moves different. a girl couldn't ask for a better community
113 notes · View notes
junewild · 2 years ago
Text
obviously we all love both of these weeks passionately, but if you had to choose one to be your favorite, would it be:
473 notes · View notes
normcdf · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
53 notes · View notes
coquelicoq · 1 month ago
Text
XIAO LANHUA??? STANDS HER FIANCE IN FRONT OF ALL HIS ADVISORS AND HANDS HIM A CUP OF POISONED WINE??? AND HE GOES SNIFF SNIFF AND IS LIKE "NOT THIS AGAIN" AND SHE'S ALL "BE A GOOD BOY AND DRINK UP, WE CAN'T STAND HERE YAPPING ALL DAY, I'M OFF TO BE TORTURED, SEE YA"??????
12 notes · View notes
summer-o-slider · 12 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
@letyukisayfuck haha Nagato tapestry go brrrr
11 notes · View notes
nonstandardrepertoire · 1 year ago
Text
as a Jewish transsexual, the Jewish ethno-nationalist¹ sales pitch has always left me cold.² over and over again, i've heard people plugging the State of Israel offer some form of the following: "history teaches that we can never fully trust non-Jews with political power to protect Jews; the only way to make sure Jewish people are always safe is to create and maintain a state where Jewish people have the political power, so we can look out for ourselves"
but the thing is, the worst transphobic harassment i've experienced in my life has come from Jews. i don't think this says anything about the relative transphobia of Jews vs non-Jews, anymore than the fact that most of my birthday presents come from New Yorkers says anything about the relative generosity of Californians, but still. the people who followed me out of the subway filming me while yelling transphobic abuse were Jewish. two of the most relentless boosters of the current wave of transphobia in the US — Ben Shapiro and Chaya Raichik — are Jewish. i should be safe in a state run by such people?
and the obvious response is to say that, well, this is about keeping me safe as a Jew, not necessarily as an anything else. it's a bulwark against anti-Jewish violence, not every other -ism under the sun.³ but the thing is, i'm not a potato-head person. you can't just snap off the trans part of me and the Jewish part of me and say the latter part is safe even when the first isn't. i'm 100% Jewish and 100% trans; if i'm not safe as a transsexual, i'm not safe as a Jew. and if i'm going to be having to fight transphobia anyway, what difference does it make if the people passing bills stripping my rights are Jews or not?⁴
if you really lean into the logic at play here — "no one outside a vulnerable demographic can be trusted to care about people in that demographic" — it's easy to wind up in absurdity. because if i can't trust goyim to have my back as a Jew and also can't trust cis people to have my back as a transsexual, perhaps i need a state run by and for Jewish transsexuals. but wait! white Jewish transsexuals are certainly regularly horrible to, eg, Black Jewish transsexuals, so we probably shouldn't be in the same state together, to say nothing of separating out the poor, the disabled, those without college degrees . . . and before you know it, you're committed to the idea that the only just world is one where we're each a state unto ourselves, perfectly safe in absolute isolation from one another — no society, no coming together across difference to lighten the burden of living, just infinite atomization, the perfect unending unwinnable war of all against all
and this, i think, reveals the fundamental futility of the project. as a transsexual, i don't think my safety will ultimately come from removing myself from people not like me. safety, i think, comes not from cutting ties, but from building them. i will only really be safe in a society that accepts difference, multiplicity, strangeness, variety. i will only be truly safe in a society where we come together — across the gulfs that separate us — to take care of one another
i think there are illuminating parallels with feminist/lesbian separatism here. in its most extreme versions, such separatism abandons the demand that women be safe around men and instead attempts the task of building a space without men for women to inhabit. similarly, it seems to me that Jewish ethno-nationalism abandons the demand that Jewish people be safe around goyim and instead attempts to build a space without goyim for Jewish people to inhabit.⁵ i think Jews can and must be safe among goyim. i think women can and must be safe among men. i think trans people can and must be safe among cis people. that is the kind of world i am committed to fighting for, not one where we give in to fear and retreat into gardens walled by suspicion and hostility⁶
i'm not going to pretend that that's an easy world to build.⁷ i'm not going to pretend i can point to a bunch of stable, just, pluralistic societies and go "eh, just do what they did!" (altho there's no shortage of societies i can point to that went the "this place is for us and only us" route and wound up producing dystopian nightmares⁸). i'm not even going to pretend that i think building a just world from where we are now is inevitable, or even that i always think it is possible. there are days it is very hard to believe. but i always think it's worth striving for. if a just world that guarantees a good life to all isn't worth striving for, what is? if we are to suffer defeat, let it be a slow defeat, a long defeat, a fighting defeat. i am not willing to give up on my neighbors. i am not willing to abandon the charge of seeking the good for those not like me. i am not willing to abandon the hope that will seek the good for me despite my strangeness to them. and i reject any philosophy or politics that asks me to do so
_________________________________________________
¹i'm using "Jewish ethno-nationalist" here because i think it's been subject to less semantic dilution than "Zionist", and i want to avoid semantic arguments here as much as possible. whatever prescriptivist arguments you want to marshal that this or that term should mean X, i think it's clear that the descriptivist ship has long since set sail when it comes to "Zionism". (when pushed for specifics, i've seen self-professed Zionists and anti-Zionists outline essentially identical political programs, which certainly makes it seem to me that these terms are of minimal utility at best)
²obviously, what's happening on the ground is very bad. but critiquing what's happening on the ground often runs into severe questions of evidential reliability and can also leave the impression that Jewish ethno-nationalism is a good idea implemented badly, which is why i want to take aim at this level here
³given the European origins of this movement in its modern incarnation, i think it's unsurprising who gets imagined as "just a Jew" and not any other marked category. and from there, i think it's also unsurprising (if depressing) how various Jews who do exist in other marked categories have been and are treated by the "Jewish State" — the promised safety turns out to be predicated on all the usual axes of whiteness, wealth, ability, and so on
⁴indeed, i have often found that groups predicated on the idea that "we're all in alignment here" are often much more resistant to acknowledging members' various bigotries than groups not predicated on that assumption
⁵and, similarly, this attempt to cleave the world along one axis of hierarchy invariably reveals the inadequacy of one-identity-only frameworks for tackling the full complexity of the world. among other things, feminist/lesbian separatism has come under sustained critique from Black feminists like Barbara Smith for sundering ties of solidarity that are critical for fighting racism. victimhood and oppression are not fixed, ontological states, but fluid, shifting, contextual relationships. we cannot undo the snarlingly intertwined systems of oppression by replicating them in miniature
⁶the fear is certainly a real emotion; it is one i have felt at times myself. sometimes it is even based on an accurate perception of the world! but also: sometimes not. my fear of kitchen knives spontaneously levitating and flying around the room certainly feels real to me, but it's not a thing that can actually happen. one of the really hard things to do in the world, i've found, is parsing out the fears that are just feelings i'm having from the fears that tell me actual actionable information about the world and then striking a livable balance between reasonable precaution and paranoia. precautions against danger often come with their own set of risks: locking a door to keep out potential thieves ups the odds of being trapped in a building fire; using a different complex password for every site raises the risk of forgetting one and having a critical account shut down; the medications that drastically cut the frequency of debilitating migraines can raise the likelihood of other adverse health effects. more broadly, viewing neighbors with suspicion, fear, and distrust has a corrosive effect on the social fabric, and makes it harder to structure society to make sure everyone has food, clothes, housing, healthcare — all the things a society is supposed to do. (it's hard to convince people to take care of people they're afraid of, especially if they believe (rightly or wrongly) that they will have to give up something they care about (usually money, but also convenience, prestige, power) for that to happen.) and that corrosive effect can get very extreme — when fascism wants to recruit you to its cause, the sales pitch is usually less "hey, do you want to unleash horrific violence against those folks over there?" and more "hey, aren't you tired of being ~afraid~? don't you want to feel ~safe~? isn't it about time you had all the wealth, respect, and power that's rightfully yours and that's been kept from you for so long?". fear isn't the only way that horrors get unleashed, but it's a very potent one. (i don't think there's a formula for striking the right balance here. as with so many balancing acts, too much comes down to context and the specifics of all those involved, not least because the scale and nature of threats can vary so wildly. i believe that everyone deserves to be safe (insofar as any of us mostly hairless apes clinging to a thin crust of dirt on an iron ball whirling thru the cosmic void around a sphere of nuclear fire can be safe from loss, grief, accident, disaster, or misfortune...), but being and feeling are different matters, and pursuing the feeling of safety without limit can easily lead to logics of annihilation.) (and indeed, i am not the first to be struck by the fact that in many ways it is in the interests of the State of Israel, as a state, if Jews feel unsafe in the rest of the world, because that feeling of unsafety is so easily leveraged to both increase political support for the State of Israel and encourage Jewish people to leave the Diaspora and move to the State of Israel. which, unnervingly, is where you sometimes find the State of Israel and its agents taking the position that Jews don't belong anywhere that isn't the immediate environs of Jerusalem, a position that is ultimately indistinguishable from any number of dime-store Judeophobias)
⁷indeed, i think this is one of many places where it's easier to identify the problem than it is to solve it. many middle schoolers can explain the problem of Fermat's Last Theorem; barely a handful of professional mathematicians in the world could explain the proof. my cat can figure out how to break a vase even tho he can't reliably find a toy he's just been playing with when he's sitting directly on top of it (it's fine, he doesn't follow me on here, i can say that about him); in some cases, a skilled artisan can repair the vase so it functions again; no one in the world can turn back time so that the vase was never broken to begin with. it's easy to invent chessboard solutions to entrenched societal conflicts — move this border here, enact this constitution there, change this societal attitude for all involved, and hey presto!, utopia. but the world is not a game of chess. education, advocacy, activism, political organization, even wildcat direct action — these are all slow, effortful, uncertain processes, and everyone with a different vision of the future is also exercising their agency to change the course of events. i think societies are easy to break and hard to repair. in many cases, i don't really know how we go from here, the real world as it actually is with all its shattered bones and aching wounds and long-festering resentments, to there, a world of true justice. but i think it's worth trying. i think it's worth imagining. i hope you do too
⁸like, idk what even to say if "Germany for the Germans" doesn't set off alarm bells. even if they raised up a brand new continent from the ocean floor, i still think i'd be wary of the political project of building a ~Jewish state for the Jews~. i don't trust nationalism of any flavor. i think the Diasporic notion of feeling kinship with and responsibility for people all around the world regardless of borders, flags, kings, bureaucracies is beautiful and worth cherishing and protecting. i don't dream of finally being on top of the hierarchy; i dream of there not being a hierarchy to begin with
49 notes · View notes
kevin-winfield · 6 months ago
Text
Nora releasing The Golden Raven on Kevin’s birthday… Neil’s book being The Raven King (reference to Riko)….
We are never escaping the Sons of Exy I see.
8 notes · View notes
wellnoe · 6 months ago
Text
there are several problems with a straight 1:1 jjk x-men au, and a lot of them revolve around gojo. the first problem is that, as i've joked about before, gojo has a little too much in common with charles and yet is distinct enough to have a little trouble sliding into a charles-shaped role. the second (related) problem is that jujutsu kaisen, and gojo's portion of the story in particular, pretty heavily emphasizes an internal hierarchy and the weight of a strict conservatism within jujutsu society, which is not something x-men really has. you have to do a lot of reshaping in order to extract all the compelling bits from jjk is what i'm saying.
8 notes · View notes
kil9 · 9 months ago
Text
everypony hates me for my complete and utter disrespect of authority
10 notes · View notes
loki-core-the-variant · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Retro post from my Zucced fb page, Loki-Core: The Variant * Say what you mean.
* Believe what we say (not what you assume we "really" mean).
* Don't teach children not to interrupt, especially using shame, and then act like autistic adults still taking that literally until we have to raise our hands to be listened to (awkwardly, because you have to face you've been hearing and ignoring our 47 false-starts), or autistic/ADH(d) adults doing it "incorrectly," are a problem. Teach us the unwritten rules of overlapping communication or GTFO. Learning by "the vibes" doesn't work for us and you know it. It's why you don't listen and interrupt us all the time, or think we're weird when we butt-in "wrongly". I've tried to get right by observation for 32 years and I'm still wrong all too often.
I suspect it's actually social hierarchy at play, and not a blanket set of rules, but I'd hate for that to be true because I actually care about other people, and it's always the same people shoved to the sidelines.
8 notes · View notes
constantvariations · 2 years ago
Text
For a show that's supposedly about female empowerment, it's odd how every major female character is heavily influenced by men
Women whose fighting styles are based on men: Ruby (Qrow), Yang (Tai), Cinder (Rhodes)
Women whose ideologies are based on men: Weiss (opposition to Jacques), Blake (same as Ghira)
Women whose stories are almost completely intertwined with men: Nora (personal arc was figuring out who she was without Ren), Pyrrha (almost every scene with her prior to V3 was with Jaune), Emerald (almost every scene prior to v8 was shared with Mercury), Salem (motivated by Ozma's death, cursed by idiot brothers)
If the writing cast reflected the character cast, we probably wouldn't have this problem
44 notes · View notes
milfbrainrot · 30 days ago
Text
something sick and twisted about how michaela was "training" simone to take over part of the charity, hence her being a mini-michaela, only for that to actually... pan out as accidentally training her to become her husband's new wife
#sirens tag#that thing of... 'no one knows how to take care of those birds like me' 'simone does'#i don't know what peter even wants in a relationship. easy trophy wife i guess.#one he doesn't blame for all of his problems already so his life can feel new and exciting and renewed like when he first cheated#but like. presumably. he doesn't view his wives as People.#so michaela training simone into being able to fulfill michaela's on-paper duties perfectly#and be an even younger ''prettier'' version of her who could maybe give peter a child#it's... i mean... michaela knew she didn't really matter at a certain point anyway - that feeling she talked about re: being small#and worrying peter was cheating at all and recognizing how his approval of her is what her whole life hinges on financially#i think she recognized it in waves but she does recognize it#AND she thought she had trained simone to be HERS. all the other staff work for peter but simone works for Her#it's all peter's money but it's michaela's loyalty in simone's case#so she thought simone would never kiss her husband! and she didn't! peter kissed her!#but just the fact of simone not telling her (on top of all the personal secrets that simone was right to keep)#meant michaela wasn't Hers anymore. she could only ever actually trust someone who was#a mirror image of herself in every possible way and she did her best to mold simone into that INCLUDINGG trust but#in making simone's whole identity hinge on pleasing michaela ofc she didn't want to tell her something devastating#it wasn't... a open and symbiotic in the way michaela thought it was i guess. and that's not really simone's fault.#they weren't just Friends they do have a hierarchy that neither of them wanted to acknowledge i think#if when michaela did find out what happened she had chosen simone over peter i think it would've been...#still devastating! but fine#she could've filed for divorce and gotten her share and kept her foundation and kept employing simone#in a branch states away where she didn't have to face her if it was too painful to continue outright working with her#or just! not send her away the way that she did even if she stayed with peter!#and tbh she did seem to acknowledge. as hard as it was. that it was peter's fault more than simone's.#so she chose peter and her current life over simone and divorce and downsizing in simple terms - i know it is emotionally complicated#and like. idk. i can't be mad that simone used the power and influence michaela gave her to be able to come out of that on top#i see why michaela tried to make things work with peter esp bc she didn't exactly have time to process it#but it was the wrong choice. she had what she needed to gain autonomy while continuing with some assets#instead of continuing under peter's thumb on a playing field that put them in a situation where peter has 0 consequences
3 notes · View notes
viktortittiforov · 1 month ago
Text
just saw a post which said non-usamerican white people criticizing US imperialism and usamerican-centrism are just using oppression olympics language to mask that they're actually just mad that on the internet they're not the center of attention and like..... wtf lmfao. the post otherwise had some good points but. wtf.
3 notes · View notes
divinekangaroo · 5 months ago
Text
attempting to get into the fluidity of using sharepoint and finally starting to feel my age re: interface design
3 notes · View notes