Ned Frame

Edward Hartwell Frame (b. August 27, 1987) is a child prodigy mathematician, philosopher, and youngest winner of the St. John's College Annual Albert Einstein Award. Frame is well known for his method of Post-Phenomenology.


The Early Years
Frame was born August 27, 1987 to Castor and Virginia Frame of Redding, Connecticut. Frame developed speech at only 3 months, his first words were "I know." Frame's mathematical ability become evident in 1990, when at age three he became the youngest person to understand Isaac Newton's obscure fluxion method of the Calculus. In 1992 at age 5 "Ned" as he likes to be called rejected Berkeley's objections to Calculus as "juvenile" and "indicative of the fundamental error of all British Philosophical thinking". In 1997 at age 10 Ned published his first essay, '"Post-Phenomenological Reinterpretation of the Schrodinger Eigenfrequenzen Equations Modified for String Theory in Minkowski's 'absolute world' in the context of Neo-Classical Neo-PostModernism"'. Shortly after publication Frame was recognized by Richard Dawkins noted Philosopher of Science at Oxford University. Dawkins invited Frame to become his apprentice and at age 12 Frame began study at Oxford as the youngest student to matriculate in the College's 900 year history. It was at Oxford under Dawkin's mentorship that Frame would develop his theory of post-phenomenological causality that would later win him the coveted Albert Einstein Award.



Post-Phenomenological Causality
Though Frame developed many of his ideas while studying at Oxford, it wasn't until he began studying under Mike Bybee at St. John's College that he discovered the unified theory of Post-Phenomenological Causality. As a freshman Frame, affectionately referred to by his colleagues as 'The Frame of Reference', studied Euclid and proposed the reinterpretation of the 4th Proposition of Book 1 from an axiomatic understanding to a post-phenomenoligical one. Frame argues that "we must understand Prop. 4, not as Euclid did, but in the context of causality, i.e., post-phenomenological causality coming about through quantum tunneling. With his new understanding of Post-Phenomenological Geometry Frame was able to reinterpret his own reinterpretation of the Eigenfrequenzen Equations for which he became reputed so many years earlier. In 1997 Frame's reinterpretation required the post-phenomenological analysis of Planck's Constant as a multidimensional constant. Thus Frame changed Planck's constant to a cube from a square in the original Psi function. However in the Annus Mirabilis after Frame reinterpreted Euclid, he retracted the modification of the dimensionality of Planck's constant in favor of interpreting Planck's constant as the variable boundary condition for all possible Psi matrices. It was this development that won him the Albert Einstein Award in 2003, at the age of fifteen.

Now & Later
After his success in uniting Physics and Metaphysics, Frame began work on Post-Phenomenological Ethics. Frame argues that the Post-Phenomenological Ethics of Emmanuel Levinas must be understood in the context of Artificial Intelligence and Singularity Frame says "Only once this reinterpretation has been completed will we be in a position to mathematically comprehend the Other". Frame's much anticipated essay "The Re-Interpretation of Post-Phenomenological Ethics" is scheduled for world-wide release on Dec 9, 2009 and is expected to surpass all possible expectations.

Famous Quotes
"Throughout the history of human thought men have constantly taken derivative after derivative, but in the process they have forgotten to integrate!" "If I have seen further than Einstein and Newton, it is because my intellect is superior." "I got everything...You've got nothing." -Note The last quote was used as the chorus of a song by rapper Lil' Wayne on his most recent release The Carter III.
 
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