The document describes a man falling to his death from the 10th floor of a building. It does so through abstract and fragmented references that allude to the man working on a construction project and being threatened with dismissal, which may have led to his fall. Key details are embedded within parentheses. The document uses mathematical language to analyze the man's fall in terms of concepts like force, momentum, and Berger's formula for optics, concluding these analyses do not fully apply to the situation given the non-mathematic nature of space.
The document describes a man falling to his death from the 10th floor of a building. It does so through abstract and fragmented references that allude to the man working on a construction project and being threatened with dismissal, which may have led to his fall. Key details are embedded within parentheses. The document uses mathematical language to analyze the man's fall in terms of concepts like force, momentum, and Berger's formula for optics, concluding these analyses do not fully apply to the situation given the non-mathematic nature of space.
The document describes a man falling to his death from the 10th floor of a building. It does so through abstract and fragmented references that allude to the man working on a construction project and being threatened with dismissal, which may have led to his fall. Key details are embedded within parentheses. The document uses mathematical language to analyze the man's fall in terms of concepts like force, momentum, and Berger's formula for optics, concluding these analyses do not fully apply to the situation given the non-mathematic nature of space.
The document describes a man falling to his death from the 10th floor of a building. It does so through abstract and fragmented references that allude to the man working on a construction project and being threatened with dismissal, which may have led to his fall. Key details are embedded within parentheses. The document uses mathematical language to analyze the man's fall in terms of concepts like force, momentum, and Berger's formula for optics, concluding these analyses do not fully apply to the situation given the non-mathematic nature of space.
3 where A is the tenth floor of steel and glass (He was on
4 the noon shift forging the dream to a reality fine mean 5 could slumber in, or whores, in antechamber, touch their bone) 6 and B the level earth (Above the clogged engine 7 a shadow traced the lines on his foot, while shoot 8 his brain with firelights the money did). Put 9 down an imaginary circle around the vertical. 10 Compute the square of guilt against an integral 11 his age built when he was young: wrong, 12 axiomatic: the sum stands thus: Along 13 the curve X (none noticed the leap; what they saw 14 was the red imprint) by which we know 15 the nothing particualr, the momentum 16 carried him to the point beyond the dictum 17 Hic primus geometrosfor a body physical, a 18 Mass, emits energy equal to zero, the stay 19 Necessary to arrive at a base, as in Bergers 20 Formula for optics. Here we remember 21 the fallacy of inclusive force if we extend 22 A to the absolute (He was, a day ago, threatened 23 With dismissal for displeasing a superior) 24 and call it the Cause: heat, hunger, air 25 these were just contingent. To recapitulate: 26 Bergers law does not apply here, as the late 27 Projections of X show, space being non-mathematic; 28 from A to B the descent exhibits a quick 29 increase in force, though the exact ellipsis we know not. 30 (The Blank and Blank Co., Inc., regrets to announce that. . . .)