Want this question answered?
Put the numbers in a column with the decimal points aligned. Add the numbers ignoring the decimal points. Insert the decimal point in the answer exactly below the column of decimal points in the numbers being added (summands).
sphere
a line segment is a part of a line that is bounded by 2 end points, and contains every point on the line between its end points
A line segment is a part of a line that is bounded by two end points, and contains every point on the line between its end points.
Working in degrees, the angle of the greater radius, minus the lesser radius, all over 360, gives the proportion of the area of the circle that is bounded by the radii. This can then be multiplied by the area of the whole circle to give the bounded area.
A sphere is a solid bounded by the set of all points at a given distance from a given point.
Put the numbers in a column with the decimal points aligned. Add the numbers ignoring the decimal points. Insert the decimal point in the answer exactly below the column of decimal points in the numbers being added (summands).
sphere
Construct
a line segment is a part of a line that is bounded by 2 end points, and contains every point on the line between its end points
A line segment is a part of a line that is bounded by two end points, and contains every point on the line between its end points.
Personal construct theory is very complex but its main points are: * Our construct systems make our world more predictable * Our construct systems can grow and change * Our construct systems influence our expectations and perceptions * Some constructs, and some aspects of our construct systems, are more important than others * Your construct system is your truth as you understand and experience it - nobody else's * Construct systems are not always internally consistent * The extent to which one person can understand another's construct system is a measure of that person's empathy A detailed explanation of these points and the application of personal construct theory are at `Kelly's Theory Summarised' http://www.enquirewithin.co.nz/theoryof.htm.
Working in degrees, the angle of the greater radius, minus the lesser radius, all over 360, gives the proportion of the area of the circle that is bounded by the radii. This can then be multiplied by the area of the whole circle to give the bounded area.
It could be an arc (a curved portion of the circumference), a chord (the straight line distance between two points) , or a wedge (the plane area bounded by two radii and an arc).Remember the circle is a plane figure, not the curved line we draw. " A circle is bounded ... ."
No. To prove this, you can actually construct the plane.
A sphere.
A construct in philosophic is a object whose existence is supposed to depend on the mind of the other subject , that is their perception , points of reference and logical processes