Site icon John Rector

From y = 1 / x to R = e-x – iθ

1 The Scalar Starter — y = 1 / x

Set Actual = 1 (we normalize reality’s numerator) and let x > 0 be the real-valued Expected. The reality equation reads

y  =  Actual / Expected
   =  1 / x .

2 Expectation as a Complex Number

A single real x hides two ingredients: a real prediction and an ideal. Write them as a complex point

E  =  P  +  i I .

3 Polar Form — E = r e

4 Reality as the Reciprocal

R  =  1 / E
   =  (1 / r) e-iθ .

5 Logarithmic Re-parameterization

Define x = ln r. Substituting r = ex turns the magnitude into an exponential factor:

R  =  e-x e-iθ
   =  e-x - iθ .

6 Reading the Two Parts

7 Geometric Intuition — Gabriel’s Horn

Plotting r as a radius on Gabriel’s Horn:

The cross-sectional area π r² evokes the Bekenstein–Hawking idea: more surface, more informational “capacity.”

8 Try It Yourself

  1. Pick any two events: one generous (A > E), one disappointing (A < E).
  2. Compute r = A / E.
  3. Find x = ln r; record |x| (surprise size) and the sign of x (direction).
  4. Plot each r on an imagined horn to see abundance vs. scarcity.

You have now moved from the simplest reciprocal to a full exponential encoding that captures shock magnitude, emotional tilt, and geometric landscape in one elegant expression.

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