A list of puns related to "Cryptanalysis of the Enigma"
im going on my second year in my cyber security associates degree and have some background in programming(c++ and python), mainly that I just taught myself by creating vsts, but crypto is really the thing that hits my passion. i started out solving a close friendβs alien languages and encrypted messages a while back, and got really into it as a regular hobby and started making some of my own. im currently trying to decide what I want to do next. i know getting a ces is great idea and I plan to do that within the next couple of months here. im mainly wondering if itβs worth it to get a double major for my bachelors in cs and mathematics, and how difficult it would be to obtain. how many of the classes overlap? and would financial aid cover a double major? also resources to learn the math involved would be really beneficial. math has always been a strong suit for me, so I feel that I could probably teach myself, if I knew where to look for information.
I'm deep into existentialism. From Nietzsche to Sartre to Camus, they all make sense in their own way, as much as I disagree with their conclusions.
But Kierkegaard, he's something else. He seems to come to the same conclusion as the other nihilists (if one can blanket-call them all that name), yet he then falls back onto Jesus and faith. Although I read his biography which summarized all of his works, I'm still unable to comprehend how he reasons to take that leap.
If one can confidently arrive at the conclusion that there is truly no purpose in life, how can one then reason themselves back into faith?
I ask because I'd love to be able to have faith. Even though it'd be artificial, itd offer infinitely more comfort than nihilism. I'm fully aware of hypocrisy of this quest, but I'm hopeful because if someone as mentally capable as Kierkegaard could fall back on that, so could someone much less intellectual.
This bears the question, how did he specifically reason the existence of God and Jesus in particular? Most of his work is highly reasoned and logical, yet its culmination takes a huge leap of faith. How? Was it because the idea was drilled into him by his father while Soren was still in his formative years? Or does he offer a genuinely appealing reason for God?
Thanks guys.
I have no idea what were they thinking when they gave an entire team 10% if you include two units that are already very good on their own.
I would not care about scarificing my 6 mages bonus and staying at 3 or any other alliance bonus if my entire team is hexing enemy team and the final rounds are basically rolling dices on whose hexes proc first so screw your team compositions and positioning if your opponent got their hexes proc first.
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