Isn’t a circle’s size dictated as a function of its radius?
So it wouldn’t matter if any line could be drawn which radiates from the center and intersects the same point on both circles unless both points were an equal distance from the center.
Between two scalar related shapes, any point you can find on one you’d be able to identify an equivalent on the other, because the exact point itself does not have a segment size.
Ergo, any two shapes with proportionate dimensions ought to be considered the same size under the comic’s schema.
This is my proof that a proton is exactly the same size as TON 618, the largest single object currently known in the universe, a black hole so large our solar system would fit within it several times over. Not the sun, the entire solar system.
Both are spherical in perception, ergo any point identified on one will have a corresponding point identifiable on the other.
Radius be damned we live in a world of light-year sized protons!
Isn’t a circle’s size dictated as a function of its radius?
So it wouldn’t matter if any line could be drawn which radiates from the center and intersects the same point on both circles unless both points were an equal distance from the center.
Removed by mod
See the thing is we’re talking about points
Zero dimensional locations on the circle’s edge.
Between two scalar related shapes, any point you can find on one you’d be able to identify an equivalent on the other, because the exact point itself does not have a segment size.
Ergo, any two shapes with proportionate dimensions ought to be considered the same size under the comic’s schema.
This is my proof that a proton is exactly the same size as TON 618, the largest single object currently known in the universe, a black hole so large our solar system would fit within it several times over. Not the sun, the entire solar system.
Both are spherical in perception, ergo any point identified on one will have a corresponding point identifiable on the other.
Radius be damned we live in a world of light-year sized protons!
Right. A circle is uniquely defined by an arbitrary point C and Ray of length ‘r’. If and only if, ‘r’ is the same, they are equal circles.