Horsemen Memes

Posts tagged with Horsemen

The Four Horsemen Of Non-Differentiable Functions

The Four Horsemen Of Non-Differentiable Functions
Behold! The mathematical apocalypse has arrived! These four graph shapes strike terror into the hearts of calculus students everywhere. Each one represents a point where derivatives throw up their hands and say "I quit!" The sharp corner, the vertical line, the cusp, and that chaotic mess in the bottom right (which looks like my brain after finals week) are all places where differentiation becomes mathematically impossible. Calculus professors use these as torture devices, cackling maniacally while students desperately try to find slopes where none exist. These aren't just curves—they're the villains in every calculus nightmare! Next time someone says math is smooth and predictable, show them these mathematical rebellions!

The Four Horsemen Of 3/4

The Four Horsemen Of 3/4
Behold the mathematical apocalypse! The "four horsemen of 3/4" showcases the exact same value expressed in four different notations: 0.75 (decimal), 3/4 (fraction), 75% (percentage), and... wait, where's the fourth one? That's the joke! There are only three representations shown despite the title promising four. Just like how 3/4 isn't quite complete, neither is this meme. The fourth horseman ghosted us harder than an asymptote approaching its limit. Mathematical humor at its finest—precise yet incomplete!

The Four Horsemen Of Physics Excuses

The Four Horsemen Of Physics Excuses
Every physics student knows these sacred incantations! The four horsemen of exam survival show horses in bizarre locations, each representing a classic excuse: "To be fair nobody did well on it" (the solidarity defense), "The curve will save me" (statistical salvation), "It wasn't in the notes/taught!" (the syllabus loophole), and "At least X did worse than me" (comparative success). These desperate rationalizations appear precisely 0.002 seconds after seeing that first impossible problem. The grading curve—that mystical mathematical mercy that transforms a 43% into a B—is the only thing standing between physics students and total existential collapse.