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400.09
All the interrelationships of system foci are conceptually
representable by
vectors
(see Sec. 521).
A system is a closed configuration
of vectors. It is a pattern of
forces constituting a geometrical integrity that returns
upon itself in a plurality of
directions. Polyhedral systems display a plurality of
polygonal perimeters, all of which
eventually return upon themselves. Systems have an electable
plurality of view-induced
polarities. The polygons of polyhedra peregrinate systematically
and sometimes
wavilinearly around three or more noncongruent axes.
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400.23
Maximum system complexity consists of a dissimilarly
quantified inventory
of unique and nonintersubstitutable components. That
is, Euler's irreducible-system
aspects of vertexes, areas, and edges exhibit the respective
dissimilar quantities 4, 4, and 6
in the minimum prime system, the tetrahedron. This demonstrates
the inherent synergy of
all systems, since their minimum overall inventory of
inherent characteristics is unpredicted
and unpredictable by any of the parts taken separately.
Systems are unpredicted by
oneness, twoness, or threeness. This explains how it
happens that general systems theory
is a new branch of science.
(See Sec. 537.30.)
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400.26
Systems are aggregates of four or more critically
contiguous relevant events
having neither solidity nor surface or linear continuity.
Events are systemic.
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![]() Fig. 400.30 |
400.30
Tiger's Skin: Typical of all finitely conceptual objects,
or systems, the
tiger's skin can be locally pierced and thence slotted
open. Thereafter, by elongating the
slot and initiating new subslots therefrom in various
directions, the skin gradually can be
peeled open and removed all in one piece. Adequate opening
of the slots into angular
sinuses will permit the skin to lie out progressively
flat. Thus, the original lunar gash from
the first puncture develops into many subgashes leading
from the original gash into any
remaining domical areas of the skin. The slitting of
a paper cone from its circular edge to
its apex allows the paper to be laid out as a flat "fan"
intruded by an angular sinus. A sinus
is the part of an angle that is not the angle's diverging
sides. Sinus means in Latin a
"withoutness"__an
opening out__a definitively introduced
"nothingness."
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400.42
Since the minimum system consists of two types of
tetrahedra, one
symmetrical (or regular) and the other asymmetrical
(or irregular); and since also the
asymmetrical have greater enveloping strength per units
of contained event phenomena,
we will differentiate the two minimum-system types by
speaking of the simplest, or
minimum, single symmetrical system as the mini-symmetric
system; and we will refer to
the minimum asymmetric system as the mini-asymmetric
system. And since the mini-
symmetric system is the regular tetrahedron, which cannot
be compounded face-to-face
with other unit-edged symmetric tetrahedra to fill allspace,
but, in order to fill allspace,
must be compounded with the tetrahedron's complementary
symmetrical system, the
octahedron, which is not a minimum system and has twice
the volume-to-surface ratio of
the tetrahedron of equal edge vector dimension; and
since, on the other hand, two special-
case minimum asymmetric tetrahedra, the A Quanta Modules
and the B Quanta Modules
(see Sec. 920.00),
have equal volume and may be face-compounded
with one another to fill
allspace, and are uniquely the highest common volumetric
multiple of allspace-filling; and
since the single asymmetrical tetrahedron formed by
compounding two symmetrical
tetrahedral A Modules and one asymmetrical tetrahedral
B Module will compound with
multiples of itself to fill all positive space, and
may be turned inside out to form its
noncongruent negative complement (which may also be
compounded with multiples of
itself to fill all negative space), this three-module,
minimum asymmetric (irregular)
tetrahedral system, which accommodates both positive
or negative space and whose
volume is exactly 1/8 that of the regular tetrahedron;
and exactly 1/32 the volume of the
regular octahedron; and exactly 1/160 the volume of
the regular vector equilibrium of zero
frequency; and exactly 1/1280 the volume of the vector
equilibrium of the initial of all
frequencies, the integer 2, which is to say that, expressed
in the omnirational terms of the
highest common multiple allspace-filling geometry's
A or B Modules, the minimum
realizable nuclear equilibrium of closest-packing symmetry
of unit radius spheres packed
around one sphere__which is the vector equilibrium (see
Sec. 413.00)
__consists of 1,280 A
or B Modules, and 1,280 = 28× 5.
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400.43
Since the two-A-Module, one-B-Module minimum asymmetric
system
tetrahedron constitutes the generalized nuclear geometrical
limit of rational differentiation,
it is most suitably to be identified as the prime minimum
rational structural system: also
known as the MITE (see "Modelability,"
Sec. 950.00). The
MITE is the mathematically
demonstrable microlimit of rational fractionation of
both physically energetic structuring
and metaphysical structuring as a single, universal,
geometrically discrete system-constant
of quantation. The MITE consists of two A Modules and
one B Module, which are
mathematically demonstrable as the minimum cosmic volume
constant, but not the
geometrical shape constant. The shape differentiability
renders the volume-to-surface ratio
of the B Modules more envelopingly powerful than the
volume-to-surface ratio of the A
Modules; ergo, the most powerful local-energy-impounding,
omnirationally quantatable,
microcosmic structural system.
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400.46
There are in all systems the additive twoness of the
poles and the
multiplicative twoness of the coexistent concavity and
convexity of the system's insideness
and outsideness.
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400.47
Planet Earth is a system. You are a system. The "surface,"
or minimally
enclosing envelopmental relationship, of any system
such as the Earth is finite.
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400.51
Systems may be symmetrical or asymmetrical.
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400.52
Systems are domains of volumes. Systems can have nuclei,
and prime
volumes cannot.
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400.55
Polyhedra: Polyhedra consist only of polyhedra. Polyhedra
are always pro
tem constellations of polyhedra. Polyhedra are defined
only by polyhedra and only by a
minimum of four polyhedra.
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400.56
All systems are polyhedra: All polyhedra are systems.
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400.60
Motion of Systems: Systems can spin. There is at least
one axis of rotation
of any system.
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400.61
Systems can orbit. Systems can contract and expand.
They can torque; they
can turn inside out; and they can interprecess their
parts.
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| Next Section: 400.65 |