The Fastest Computer Doesn’t Compute

Ilexa Yardley
The Circular Theory
3 min readDec 4, 2020

Digging into the human mind.

Photo by Van Tay Media on Unsplash

Pi in mathematics is the correct articulation (name) (representation) for the human mind.

Pi

Where pi cannot (not) operate without the zero and the one because the zero is a circumference and the one is a diameter.

Circumference and Diameter

This means the zero is, at all times, and therefore, half-the-time, a one.

Zero
One

Where, half-the-time is all-the-time:

Half and Whole
Half
Whole

Where the diagram is constant and the words to describe the diagram are variables (variable).

Constant Variable

This means that everything depends on X and Y, more correctly known as 0 and 1, yet also known as F and M.

F and M

So how does the human mind distinguish between the elements articulated above? There is a circular (duplicitous) relationship between an individual and a group. Explaining negation.

Individual and Group
Individual

Meaning the individual is the largest and smallest group. Explaining why (and proving) a computer doesn’t, actually, compute.

Compute (Computer)

It changes values, moving X to Y (0 to 1) (changing X to Y, 0 to 1). Where speed makes no difference whatsoever. Because, within an uber-simple (always-conserved) circle, X is always Y (zero is always one) (circumference is always diameter).

0 to 1 (1 to 0)

This proves negation is duplication (the equal sign is a circle).

Negation (Duplication)
Equal Equals Not-Equal (Half-the-Time) (All-The-Time)

It’s the diagram that’s important. All the rest? Superfluous.

Conservation of the Circle is the core, and, therefore, the only, dynamic in Nature. Explaining the computer. And, the human mind. In general.

The (Real) Theory of Everything, Yardley, Ilexa — Amazon.com

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