Symbolic logic: Difference between revisions
(- speculation) |
m (Temp add of category to help with larger move of tophat templates to the ... top :)) |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
The controls must have required a genius to solve them as [[Eric Klieg]], a member of the [[Brotherhood of Logicians]], could not work the controls without the [[Second Doctor]]. The controls consisted of a series of buttons and levers which had to be pushed and pulled in the correct sequence to operate the [[Cyber-Technology]] in the tombs. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'') | The controls must have required a genius to solve them as [[Eric Klieg]], a member of the [[Brotherhood of Logicians]], could not work the controls without the [[Second Doctor]]. The controls consisted of a series of buttons and levers which had to be pushed and pulled in the correct sequence to operate the [[Cyber-Technology]] in the tombs. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'') | ||
{{Wikipediainfo}} | {{Wikipediainfo}}[[category:Wikipediainfo]] | ||
[[Category:Mathematics from the real world]] | [[Category:Mathematics from the real world]] |
Revision as of 08:18, 13 December 2014
Symbolic logic was an advanced form of higher mathematics. (AUDIO: Phantoms of the Deep)
It was the basis of the Cybermen's control systems in the Telos Cyber-tombs. It was there to test humans for their intelligence. They would then to be subjected to Cyber-conversion and become the new race of Cybermen.
The controls must have required a genius to solve them as Eric Klieg, a member of the Brotherhood of Logicians, could not work the controls without the Second Doctor. The controls consisted of a series of buttons and levers which had to be pushed and pulled in the correct sequence to operate the Cyber-Technology in the tombs. (TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen)