E constant Memes

Posts tagged with E constant

Really Named Him After A Number

Really Named Him After A Number
The joke here is absolutely brilliant! Euler's parents supposedly named him after "e" (approximately 2.71828), but that's mathematically impossible since Euler was born in 1707, and he's actually the one who discovered the constant "e" later in his career! It's like naming your kid after a number that doesn't exist yet. Time-traveling parents with mathematical foresight? Now that's some next-level parental planning! Mathematical historians are quietly having a breakdown in the corner.

1 In E Chance

1 In E Chance
This meme is a mathematical masterpiece! It plays with the mathematical constant e (approximately 2.71828) and gender identity in one brilliant swoop. The button scenario presents a classic probability thought experiment: press a button with a 99% chance of getting rich vs 1% chance of "becoming a girl." But the comment below brilliantly points out that pressing it 100 times gives you roughly a 1/e (about 36.8%) chance of never hitting that 1% outcome—a direct application of the limit definition of e ! The final comment flips the script entirely with a trans-positive punchline that makes both mathematicians and gender studies folks nod in appreciation. Pure probability poetry!

It Grew Exponentially And Now I'm Exponentially Disappointed

It Grew Exponentially And Now I'm Exponentially Disappointed
The mathematically challenged villain just discovered the hard truth about compound interest. One dollar at 100% interest compounds to exactly e dollars (2.7182...) after one year of continuous compounding. That's the natural base of logarithms working its cruel magic. Should've taken the $100K upfront—rookie villain mistake. The exponential function waits for no one, not even cartoon supervillains with questionable financial advisors.

Seems Like A Fair Deal

Seems Like A Fair Deal
The ultimate calculus transaction. Both parties get exactly what they put in because the derivative of e^x is... e^x. That's right, this function is its own derivative, making it the narcissist of the mathematical world. Differentiate it all you want, it just keeps coming back unchanged like that one colleague who never updates their research methods. The mathematical equivalent of "I am what I am" but with exponential confidence.