The rules of space exploration.
by Henryk Szubinski
In sports as with every type of competition.
dissquaification occurs as the
first contestant has won and the second contestant has lost.
As for the point of the winner are greater than the looser. So then, this must be due to
the points of the winner in a progression of winning points as they expand the score. And when the
resulting loosing side is displacing the points in reverse, there occurs a moment when the winner has
more expansions of winning methods than the looser and the compression of the points to below the
mean of their totals as are defined by rules to compute the mean value for every rule used so that the mean
defines the winner. This mean = 0.5 of the instance of the expansion being greater than the compression.
So the rules have to be such that the 0.5 defines the mean along every part of the game as well as the
rules that define each stage of it.
So in terms of Kennedy and the missions to the Moon, the dissqualification defines the player that has taken
the error in the 0.5 system of measure of winning points and then tried to change the whole outcome of the
game to the point system where the 0.5 changes to 5.0
Meaning that there are 5 rules that are broken or one of them is broken so that the remaining rules cannot
function.
So the missions to the Moon were possible ,"dissqualifiers" in that the 10 or so missions to the Moon have to
have rules just as in sport.
So then there is something more to it than just this. The functions of unity of the type of ,"winning method"has
to be the way in which the ,"method of playing" may be found to have cheats in it. So in this way a good player
could be said to the ,"ideal 0.5 " measure of the whole method of sport. But it may also be that the game becomes
unpopular due to the non investments of the types of , finances that go into sport". In this way ,the game player
may have less income and this in turn makes it difficult to keep the game in change.
So who were these dissqualifiers and who were those who , "ununified" the missions to the Moon. What we know
is that Kennedy was unpopular in some sense of ,"him having knowledge of how to play the game of the missions
to the Moon" and why much about him is covered by the ,"illegal secrecy" .This concerns the point system and why
one point is more than another. Meaning that to have, one point the other player must accept the rule and the origins
of it are related to the beginings of ,"why numbers were used for counting" and the various civilizations that expanded on
this point system. So it would be easy to see why points are becoming economical as we displace into space and
colonize and also explore space.
Kennedy was known for his quotes. Some of them about the one as ,"one point" in reference to, ;
"physical fitness is not only one of the most important keys to a healthy body, it is the basis of dynamic and
creative intellectual activity".
and another quote:
One person can make a difference and everyone should try".
Kennedy's speech about the dangers of space exploration were based on the ,"very large scales" of the spaceships, so that the rule, "the bigger the better" would take presidence in the space race and the missions would become adventures where each new stage was greater than the previous. Because of something known of as the, "meaning of any sport or competition" that, the competition increases as one player goes from the quater finals to the semi finals and then onto the finals.
noun. A match or round immediately preceding the final, the winner of which goes on to the final. ... 'Chinese women have made the semi-finals in hockey and thequarter-finals in volleyball.' 'The winners of the semi-finals will take part in a county final to decide the winner.'
A quarter-final is one of the four matches in a competition which decides which fourplayers or teams will compete in the semi-final.
The round before the quarterfinals has multiple designations. Often it's called the round of sixteen, last sixteen, or (in South Asia) pre quarter-finals. In many other languages the term used to describe these eight matches translates to eighth-final, though this term is rare in English itself.
semifinal - one of the two competitions in the next to the last round of an elimination tournament. semi. elimination tournament - a tournament in which losers are eliminated in successive rounds. match - a formal contest in which two or more persons or teams compete. Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection.
Semifinal is the noun and its another form is semi-final. The word means a competition just before the final tournament or the last round before the elimination round.
The mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows: In the draw for the round of 16, the eight group winners are seeded, and the eight group runners-up are unseeded. The seeded teams are drawn against the unseeded teams, with the seeded teams hosting the second leg.
What you're describing is a Best of 3. This is a Best of 2. They play two matches and points are awarded based on results.
Noun. semifinalist (plural semifinalists) A person who competes in the semifinals, the winner of which goes on to compete in the finals.
So in this way the competition between the gods of ancient Greece and the figure of Apollo as the one who defined the rule of competition .
That Kennedy was of the, title, "nobility" and his estate was that of ,"Camelot", his knowledge of the rules was beyond question and many
who know that ,"noble points systems" are divulged by every being on Earth as the ,"competition" to be the ,"best" there could ever be.
In American contexts, Camelot refers to the presidency of John F. Kennedy. In a 1963 Life interview, Jacqueline, his widow, referenced a line from the Lerner and Loewe musical to describe the Kennedy White House: "Don't let it be forgot, that once there was a spot, for one brief shining moment, that was known as Camelot." She indicated that it was one of Kennedy's favorite lyrics from the musical and added, "there'll be great Presidents again, but there'll never be another Camelot again. […] It will never be that way again."[26]
But it did happen that there are other nobles that keep Camelot alive.
To mention, King Arthur you must mention the point system ( of competition) of ,"magic" as the wizard Merlin was able to define for King Arthur to live by.
from Wikipedia
date 2019
May 5
Camelot is a castle and court associated with the legendary King Arthur. Absent in the early Arthurian material, Camelot first appeared in 12th-century French romances and, after the Lancelot-Grail cycle, eventually came to be described as the fantastic capital of Arthur's realm and a symbol of the Arthurian world.
The stories locate it somewhere in Great Britain and sometimes associate it with real cities, though more usually its precise location is not revealed. Most scholars regard it as being entirely fictional, its unspecified geography being perfect for chivalric romance writers
noun. A match or round immediately preceding the final, the winner of which goes on to the final. ... 'Chinese women have made the semi-finals in hockey and thequarter-finals in volleyball.' 'The winners of the semi-finals will take part in a county final to decide the winner.'
A quarter-final is one of the four matches in a competition which decides which fourplayers or teams will compete in the semi-final.
The round before the quarterfinals has multiple designations. Often it's called the round of sixteen, last sixteen, or (in South Asia) pre quarter-finals. In many other languages the term used to describe these eight matches translates to eighth-final, though this term is rare in English itself.
semifinal - one of the two competitions in the next to the last round of an elimination tournament. semi. elimination tournament - a tournament in which losers are eliminated in successive rounds. match - a formal contest in which two or more persons or teams compete. Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection.
Semifinal is the noun and its another form is semi-final. The word means a competition just before the final tournament or the last round before the elimination round.
The mechanism of the draws for each round is as follows: In the draw for the round of 16, the eight group winners are seeded, and the eight group runners-up are unseeded. The seeded teams are drawn against the unseeded teams, with the seeded teams hosting the second leg.
What you're describing is a Best of 3. This is a Best of 2. They play two matches and points are awarded based on results.
Noun. semifinalist (plural semifinalists) A person who competes in the semifinals, the winner of which goes on to compete in the finals.
So in this way the competition between the gods of ancient Greece and the figure of Apollo as the one who defined the rule of competition .
That Kennedy was of the, title, "nobility" and his estate was that of ,"Camelot", his knowledge of the rules was beyond question and many
who know that ,"noble points systems" are divulged by every being on Earth as the ,"competition" to be the ,"best" there could ever be.
In American contexts, Camelot refers to the presidency of John F. Kennedy. In a 1963 Life interview, Jacqueline, his widow, referenced a line from the Lerner and Loewe musical to describe the Kennedy White House: "Don't let it be forgot, that once there was a spot, for one brief shining moment, that was known as Camelot." She indicated that it was one of Kennedy's favorite lyrics from the musical and added, "there'll be great Presidents again, but there'll never be another Camelot again. […] It will never be that way again."[26]
But it did happen that there are other nobles that keep Camelot alive.
To mention, King Arthur you must mention the point system ( of competition) of ,"magic" as the wizard Merlin was able to define for King Arthur to live by.
from Wikipedia
date 2019
May 5
Camelot is a castle and court associated with the legendary King Arthur. Absent in the early Arthurian material, Camelot first appeared in 12th-century French romances and, after the Lancelot-Grail cycle, eventually came to be described as the fantastic capital of Arthur's realm and a symbol of the Arthurian world.
The stories locate it somewhere in Great Britain and sometimes associate it with real cities, though more usually its precise location is not revealed. Most scholars regard it as being entirely fictional, its unspecified geography being perfect for chivalric romance writers