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Fractally evil

Someone who's seen as evil, no matter if you zoom in to every conceivable resolution to their worldviews, beliefs' or morals down to the level of quarks, bosons and beyond Planck level, they would be considered as evil.
It could be used as an insult against people who identifies as a "MAP" or "MAPsexual," or pedophiles like EDP445, Apollo Quiboloy and e.t.c.
Examples of fractally evil people:
- People who identify as MAP or MAPsexual
- People who are charge of child sexual abuse
- People who has a history of atrocities not limited to genocide, war crimes, deportation and ethnic cleansing (e.g. Adolf Hitler)
- People who started a world war
- Animal Abusers
- Ragebaiters, or post-trolls that does the most unhinged shit, to the point they are praising Nazis or Fascists willingly.
- Nazis and Neo-Nazis
- Confederates and Ku Klux Klan
- Any Cult Leader like Apollo Quiboloy
- Foodistzen
- Bella The Wolf
- UTTP
by MarioFan171 October 25, 2024
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Fractal

An ITERATED FUNCTION SYSTEM (IFS) is a set of CONTRACTIONS, which are ways of scaling the plane by the same amount in every VECTOR BASIS. An ATTRACTOR is the set S (a shape) for which the union of the images of S under the application of all contractions in the given IFS is equivalent to S. A self-similar fractal is then the unique ATTRACTOR of an ITERATED FUNCTION SYSTEM (IFS).
The Sierpinski Triangle is a fractal. And the rest of these definitions are fractally awful.
by owochanriemannsigma February 3, 2025
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Fractal Engineering

The discipline of designing structures, systems, and algorithms that are intentionally fractal to optimize properties like surface area, fault tolerance, bandwidth, or mechanical strength. Fractal Engineering moves beyond analysis (measuring fractal dimension) to synthesis (building fractal forms). It includes designing hierarchical ventilation systems for buildings, fractal flow distributors for chemical reactors, self-similar power grids for resilience, and recursive cooling channels for fusion reactors. It's manufacturing nature's favorite geometry.
Fractal Engineering Example: A fractal fluid mixer engineered for a pharmaceutical reactor isn't a simple pipe; it's a tree-like cascade of branching channels, each bifurcation splitting flow to maintain constant velocity and mixing efficiency across scales. The engineer didn't just copy a lung; they computed the optimal fractal dimension and branching ratio for the fluid's viscosity and flow rate. This is Fractal Engineering: building systems that breathe like lungs, branch like trees, and perfuse like capillaries, because evolution perfected those designs over eons.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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Fractal Technologies

Practical devices, algorithms, and systems that exploit fractal geometry to achieve superior performance in sensing, imaging, communication, and computation. Fractal antennas are compact and multiband because their self-similar shape resonates at multiple frequencies. Fractal image compression algorithms achieve high ratios by exploiting self-similarity within natural images. Fractal heat sinks maximize surface area within a constrained volume. These technologies don't just use fractals as decoration; they harness their mathematical properties for function.
Fractal Technologies *Example: A fractal antenna etched onto a mobile phone circuit board looks nothing like a classic dipole. Its Koch snowflake or Sierpinski gasket shape repeats at smaller scales, allowing it to resonate efficiently at 4G, 5G, and WiFi frequencies simultaneously, all within a square centimeter. This isn't aesthetic; it's Fractal Technology—using self-similar geometry to solve the multi-band antenna problem that confounds Euclidean designs.*
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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Fractal Sciences

The collective term for the diverse fields that use fractal geometry and scaling analysis as primary investigative tools. This includes fractal physiology (diagnosing disease from heartbeat fractal scaling), fractal geology (characterizing porosity of oil reservoirs), fractal image compression, fractal antenna design, and fractal statistical mechanics. Fractal Sciences share a common methodology: quantify the scale-invariant properties of a system, and use those exponents as fingerprints of underlying generative processes.
Fractal Sciences Example: A cardiologist practicing Fractal Science doesn't just count heartbeats; they analyze the fractal scaling of inter-beat intervals. A healthy heart's rhythm is not metronomic but exhibits complex, long-range correlations across multiple timescales. Disease (heart failure, atrial fibrillation) often manifests as a loss of this fractal complexitythe signal becomes either too random or too periodic. The fractal dimension becomes a diagnostic vital sign.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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Fractal Dynamics

The study of how systems evolve over time when their underlying state space, attractors, or trajectories exhibit fractal geometry. Chaos theory often reveals strange attractors—fractal sets in phase space that orbits never leave but never settle onto a single point. Fractal Dynamics analyzes these objects: their dimension, their topology, their scaling properties, and how they govern the system's long-term behavior. It's the dynamics of the infinitely wrinkled, the perpetually unsettled.
Fractal Dynamics Example: The Lorenz system's "butterfly" attractor is the iconic subject of Fractal Dynamics. Weather doesn't repeat; it orbits a fractal set of infinitely many sheets, never exactly retracing but forever confined. Fractal Dynamics asks: What is the dimension of this set? How does the system's sensitivity to initial conditions relate to its fractal geometry? It's the mathematics of perpetual novelty within bounded possibility.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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Fractal Mechanics

A theoretical framework that extends classical mechanics to systems with fractal geometry or fractal dynamics. Traditional mechanics assumes smooth, differentiable trajectories and boundaries. Fractal Mechanics relaxes these assumptions, allowing for paths that are continuous but nowhere differentiable, surfaces with infinite perimeter, and force distributions that are statistically self-similar across scales. It's the physics of mountains, clouds, and cracked earth—where the Euclidean ideal meets the jagged real.
Fractal Mechanics Example: Modeling crack propagation in a heterogeneous material requires Fractal Mechanics. The crack doesn't advance smoothly; it jumps, branches, and halts, its path a fractal trace of the material's internal stresses. The energy release isn't continuous but cascades across scales. Traditional fracture mechanics fails; fractal mechanics, parameterizing the crack's fractal dimension and scaling exponents, succeeds in predicting failure.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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