The Pythagoreans had a lot of crazy ideas. They weren't allowed, for example, to touch beans. I think they were hitting the hypotenuse a little too much, if you catch my drift.
Science has proven that there is no structure stronger nor more stable than the Jell-O mold. They have proven this with various math symbols on old-school chalk boards, the kind with dust and black erasers and frangible chalk sticks that cannot survive for more than a couple of minutes. Most classrooms today have dry-erase boards instead of old-school chalk boards. Most of these classrooms don't prove anything very interesting. The most modern of modern classrooms have robots that demonstrate ideas through expressive dance so you don't have to write things down any more. "How does the Pythagorean theorem make you feel, Jimmy?"
"Well, I guess..."
"No, no, no. Don't tell us. Show us! Dance, Jimmy! Dance!"
Jimmy dances a square dance.
The cosmos, according to Pythagoras, is filled with vacuous bubbles. These came, of course, from the inhaling of the void by the previously perfect apeiron. Jimmy dances and dances and dances from vacuous bubble to vacuous bubble, robots swirling around him all the while. Today we know better than Pythagoras. We have learned the secret of the Jell-O mold.
Hello, friends. How are you today?
Later. Love.