Raise the Specter

Raise-the-Specter-0.mp3
Raise-the-Specter-0.mp4
Raise-the-Specter-I.mp3
Raise-the-Specter-I.mp4
Raise-the-Specter-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Raise the specter
(To our vector)
We’re the force
(Throwing us off course)

[Bridge]
(Oh, of course)

[Verse 1]
Very sharply pointed
(Higher and higher)
Showing our direction
(Aspire to dire)

[Chorus]
Raise the specter
(To our vector)
We’re the force
(Throwing us off course)

[Bridge]
Made us veer
(Time we steer)
Clearly (back to reality)

[Verse 2]
A large cluster of vectors
(Pointing the same way)
So much for the hecklers
(Wallow in dismay)

[Chorus]
Raise the specter
(To our vector)
We’re the force
(Throwing us off course)

[Bridge]
Made us veer
(Time we steer)
Clearly (back to reality)

[Chorus]
Raise the specter
(To our vector)
We’re the force
(Throwing us off course)

[Outro]
Steer us (nearly)
Clearly (to reality)

A MATH AND SCIENCE NOTE

What are vectors?

  • A vector is something that has both magnitude (size) and direction.

  • It’s like an arrow:

    • The length shows how strong it is.

    • The arrowhead shows where it’s going.

Examples of vectors:

  • Wind blowing at 10 mph east.

  • A car moving 60 mph northwest.

  • Force pushing an object 5 Newtons upward.

Not just size — also where it’s aimed.

What is the angle between two or more vectors called?

It’s simply called the angle between the vectors.

More formally:

  • It’s the smallest angle you would rotate one vector around to make it line up with the other.

  • It’s important because it shows how closely two directions or forces are aligned.

  • In physics and math, you often calculate it using the dot product formula:

cos⁡(θ)=A⃗⋅B⃗∣A⃗∣∣B⃗∣\cos(\theta) = \frac{\vec{A} \cdot \vec{B}}{|\vec{A}||\vec{B}|}

where:

  • θ\theta = the angle between the vectors

  • A⃗⋅B⃗\vec{A} \cdot \vec{B} = dot product (a way of multiplying two vectors)

  • ∣A⃗∣|\vec{A}| and ∣B⃗∣|\vec{B}| = magnitudes (lengths) of the vectors

Why is the angle between vectors important?

  • In physics, it helps understand how much one force affects another.

  • In engineering, it tells you how efficiently forces work together (or against each other).

  • In navigation, it shows how far off-course you are.

Simple picture:

  • Two arrows from the same point.

  • The angle between their directions = the “angle between vectors.”

A vector diagram of human-induced climate change would show:

  • Each major human activity as a vector (an arrow).

  • Each vector would have:

    • Magnitude = how strong the effect is (how much it drives climate change).

    • Direction = what type of effect it causes (warming, cooling, feedback loops, etc.).

Some of the main vectors would be:

Activity Vector Direction Vector Magnitude
Burning fossil fuels (coal, oil, gas) Strongly toward global warming Very large
Deforestation Toward warming (loss of carbon sinks) Large
Industrial agriculture Toward warming (methane, nitrous oxide) Medium-large
Aerosol pollution (tiny particles) Slightly toward cooling (reflect sunlight) Small-medium
Urbanization (heat islands) Toward local and global warming Medium
Climate feedback loops (like melting ice reducing reflectivity) Toward accelerated warming Growing rapidly

How the diagram would look:

  • A large cluster of vectors mostly pointing in the same general warming direction.

  • A few smaller vectors pointing opposite (cooling, like aerosols) — but not strong enough to cancel out the warming ones.

  • Some vectors bending and amplifying others, showing feedback loops (ex: hotter temperatures = more wildfires = more CO₂ released = even hotter temperatures).

Conceptually:

  • Human-induced climate change would look like an overwhelmingly strong push (vector sum) toward global warming.

  • The overall resultant vector would be:

    • Very long

    • Very sharply pointed toward higher temperatures, more extreme weather, rising seas, ecosystem collapse, etc.

In simple terms:
Imagine a bunch of arrows (vectors) — the biggest and most powerful ones (like fossil fuel burning) all point toward “Warming” with huge force. A few tiny arrows (like aerosol cooling) point the other way, but they’re way too small to stop the giant surge.

From the album “Angle

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

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