Peter Pettigrew Core

Peter Pettigrew Core

Peter Pettigrew core

More Posts from Neyso and Others

4 months ago
neyso - Ney
neyso - Ney
1 month ago
neyso - Ney
3 months ago

SO much about doing well is just not even giving your brain the time to sabotage you. Like deciding to just get started on a task before your brain could conjure up thoughts like “but there’s always tomorrow” “ruminate on this pointless thing instead” like sometimes you genuinely just have to put pen to paper and do

1 month ago

i love skk so much because theyre just so stupid, 15!skk is by far the two stupidest creatures i have seen, theyre smart apart from eachother but anytime theyre nearby they gain like -70 to intelligence and +50 to homosexuality and i think its very cutieful because they ACT like stupid teenagers and they ARE stupid teenagers.

5 months ago
neyso - Ney
neyso - Ney
3 months ago
neyso - Ney
3 months ago
neyso - Ney
1 month ago

…help im still doinit

Kill me I am doing something that is so not related to my studies but I HAVE TO finish it

2 months ago

sirius and remus arguing about who's last name they want to take

sirius: I'M NOT STAYING A FUCKING BLACK

remus: I'M NOT GOING TO BE WOLFY MCWOLF MARRIED TO DOG MCWOLF

3 months ago

赤羽業 & 浅野学秀: the Venus de Milo problem

赤羽業 & 浅野学秀: The Venus De Milo Problem

The results of the second semester finals between Gakushū and Karma were a convergence of their respective narratives throughout the school year—two students molded by opposing forces. Their teachers, reflections of each other’s antithesis, shaped their worldviews, while their relationships with those around them sculpted their distinct approaches to solving the final math problem. The infamous image of Venus de Milo was not just an emblem for the question; it was the perfect metaphor for the philosophical gap between the opposing sides in the academics area of Assassination Classroom.

赤羽業 & 浅野学秀: The Venus De Milo Problem
赤羽業 & 浅野学秀: The Venus De Milo Problem

"Atoms" and "body-centered cubic structures"... I can't let those terms throw me. The question itself is quite simple. "You are inside a box surrounded by enemies... calculate the volume of your territory". Since our powers are equal, our attacks nullify each other. In other words, everything on the inside is my territory.

I'm surrounded by eight enemies inside this cube. Which means I need to calculate the volume of eight seals... and deduct that from the entire cube to get the volume of A0!

For Gakushu, the math problem was a test of control, an exercise in subjugating chaos to rationality. His solution was methodical, precise, and insular. To him, the box was a microcosm of his reality: a confined space where the rules are absolute, and success is achieved by bending those rules to one’s will. His focus on the “body-centered cubic structure” was emblematic of his fixation on the quantifiable. Pareto efficiency: Gakushu operates under the assumption that resources (or, in this case, space) must be allocated with optimal precision, leaving no room for inefficiency or external variables.

Yet, his flaw lies in his refusal to acknowledge the world outside the box. His worldview, while brilliant, is fundamentally limited by its rigidity. Gakushu does not look beyond the immediate; his vision, though sharp, is narrow.

Occam’s Razor is a philosophical principle suggests that the simplest solution is often the correct one. Gakushu eliminated extraneous elements, breaking the problem into its most essential parts to focus on what can be controlled within the given parameters. This is not to say he was wrong- we know that Gakushu's solution was correct. What decided the exam results was the race against time, which all comes back to how fast they arrive to the answer. Gakushu shaved down the details of the problem to maximize time and efficiency. In his own words: "The question itself is quite simple". Yet in his haste to simplify the problem, he unknowingly complicated it unnecessarily for himself, which ended in his loss.

The animation captures Gakushu’s mindset perfectly: his field of vision narrows, spotlighting only the part of the question he deems essential, with the rest fading into darkness. While his approach is flawless in theory and execution, it leaves no room for alternative interpretations or broader connections, leading to that inadvertent inefficiency. In another context, his approach would have been unbeatable.

赤羽業 & 浅野学秀: The Venus De Milo Problem
赤羽業 & 浅野学秀: The Venus De Milo Problem

I was only looking at this single small cube, but... since this is a crystal structure built from atoms... that means the same structure continues on the outside. In other words... there is more to this world than this single cube.

And if I look around me, I can see that everyone has their own unique talent... their own territory. And everyone else can see that too!

"Everyone has their own unique talent… their own territory," is an example of moral relativism, the idea that no single territory, talent, or solution is inherently superior to another.

Karma initially approached the question with the mental schema that it required extraordinary talent or effort to solve. By rereading and reframing the problem, he adjusted his schema to understand that the solution lay in simplicity and clarity, rather than overthinking or exceptional skill.

In contrast to Gakushu's animation, Karma’s mental process is visually chaotic, the animation mirroring his initial overwhelm. The camera pans dizzyingly across the paper, as if he’s grappling with the sheer surface-level complexity of the problem. But this momentary disorientation sparks something critical: a shift in perspective.

His realization has the essence of metacognition, which is the ability to think about one’s own thinking. He steps back from the problem, recognizing its context within a larger framework. This is the dialectical opposition between them: while Gakushu seeks to rule the box, Karma understands that the box is merely one part of a vast, interconnected world. His solution acknowledges the multiplicity of perspectives, valuing the contributions of others as integral to his own success.

Rather than avoiding the problem’s complexity, he embraces it (literally opening his arms lmao) using his own experiences and relationships as a lens to find clarity. Karma’s breakthrough is not his alone. It’s a culmination of the lessons from Korosensei and the camaraderie of Class E. These influences allow him to reframe the problem, breaking through its apparent complexity and arrive at an easy solution. Gakushu just didn't have that luxury from his father and Class A.

The Venus de Milo as a Metaphor

赤羽業 & 浅野学秀: The Venus De Milo Problem

The Venus de Milo is known for its iconic missing arms, which were long gone before the statue was even discovered. Because of this, many interpretations of how the statue of Venus was posing and what the artist was trying to portray arose. In the same way, the final question symbolized a challenge that was both finite in its mathematical boundaries yet infinite in the ways it could be perceived. Here lies the thematic brilliance of the sculpture and the exam question: both demand the solver to confront the known and the unknown simultaneously.

赤羽業 & 浅野学秀: The Venus De Milo Problem
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • woefulstar
    woefulstar liked this · 1 month ago
  • misledblksite
    misledblksite reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • icarusfate
    icarusfate liked this · 1 month ago
  • kawaiimusiccollection
    kawaiimusiccollection liked this · 1 month ago
  • ak1su
    ak1su liked this · 1 month ago
  • cigar3tte-m0m
    cigar3tte-m0m liked this · 1 month ago
  • kitkat135
    kitkat135 liked this · 1 month ago
  • buckskittle
    buckskittle liked this · 1 month ago
  • dumbbell-bella
    dumbbell-bella liked this · 1 month ago
  • avab00ks9
    avab00ks9 liked this · 1 month ago
  • katie-the-author
    katie-the-author liked this · 1 month ago
  • xdbug-bob
    xdbug-bob liked this · 1 month ago
  • onion-sliced-apples
    onion-sliced-apples liked this · 1 month ago
  • fanfic-funnies
    fanfic-funnies liked this · 1 month ago
  • whyamilikethis-jpg
    whyamilikethis-jpg liked this · 1 month ago
  • a5hsmith-13
    a5hsmith-13 liked this · 1 month ago
  • kenkozkmg
    kenkozkmg liked this · 1 month ago
  • dusk-muse
    dusk-muse liked this · 1 month ago
  • m4ri4msstuff
    m4ri4msstuff liked this · 1 month ago
  • boxofdinosaurs
    boxofdinosaurs liked this · 1 month ago
  • soythesauce
    soythesauce liked this · 1 month ago
  • deepweaselzippergoth
    deepweaselzippergoth liked this · 1 month ago
  • idkanymorebuthi
    idkanymorebuthi liked this · 1 month ago
  • character---obsessed
    character---obsessed liked this · 1 month ago
  • notstoppingme
    notstoppingme reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • pomegranateboba
    pomegranateboba liked this · 1 month ago
  • rbl4ckpz
    rbl4ckpz liked this · 1 month ago
  • woods3115
    woods3115 liked this · 1 month ago
  • lucieboo22
    lucieboo22 liked this · 1 month ago
  • foulcheesecakeavenue
    foulcheesecakeavenue liked this · 1 month ago
  • prettyvirtues
    prettyvirtues liked this · 1 month ago
  • klriggs07
    klriggs07 liked this · 1 month ago
  • silvercherrylights
    silvercherrylights liked this · 1 month ago
  • baby-lotion28
    baby-lotion28 liked this · 1 month ago
  • certifiedfangrl
    certifiedfangrl liked this · 1 month ago
  • belenchula
    belenchula reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • peachylemonade725
    peachylemonade725 liked this · 1 month ago
  • itsriotmotherfuckers
    itsriotmotherfuckers liked this · 1 month ago
  • just-here-for-ff
    just-here-for-ff liked this · 1 month ago
  • lilyandlilies123
    lilyandlilies123 liked this · 1 month ago
  • bluskai
    bluskai reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • itingtmywly
    itingtmywly liked this · 1 month ago
  • the-h-incase143
    the-h-incase143 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • the-h-incase143
    the-h-incase143 liked this · 1 month ago
  • blueheartsiris
    blueheartsiris liked this · 1 month ago
  • nobleflowermybeloveds
    nobleflowermybeloveds liked this · 1 month ago
  • iamconstantlyconfused
    iamconstantlyconfused liked this · 1 month ago
  • c0rl3on1s
    c0rl3on1s reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • thesongofsoleil
    thesongofsoleil liked this · 1 month ago
  • never-you-bitch
    never-you-bitch liked this · 1 month ago
neyso - Ney
Ney

broken promise is the saddest thing on earth my friend

445 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags