11/24/2021 Justin Coslor -- Quantifying Qualitative Variables -- Qualitative variables such as descriptive adjectives can always have quantitative dimensions. For instance, we can treat qualities such as colors or smells or sounds or texture or taste or mood as constants and assign a prime number to each particular variety of the form of sensory input or status and assign a coefficient of something like zero through nine to be multiplied by the prime number to represent its intensity. That way a particular object or noun handle name of an object or independent constant can be represented by a set of composite numbers that can be prime factored, noting that the list of sensory input varieties as a whole would need to start out at the prime number elevin to set aside the coefficient intensity numbers zero through ten with zero being the absence or false status of the sensory variety prime constant and ten could be used to represent it if the intensity is unknown and nine can represent the maximum ultimate intensity status coefficient of its prime as a quantitative dimension of the qualitative constant, and one can represent the minimum intensity that registers as true and two through eight can represent the inbetween intensities of the sensory input variety.