Chris Peterson wrote:Sandstone wrote:I've scoured the finest mathematical resources known to humanity, and a cone is... well... a cone. You know, one of those round pointy things.
The error you made was in scouring "mathematical resources". The APOD caption isn't a mathematical discourse, nor are the discussions here. And a quick perusal of ordinary English language dictionaries will immediately reveal that a cone
can be something other than "one of those round pointy things".
He must not have researched geometry either. In geometry those "round pointy things" are known as "right circular cones", but pyramids (triangular, rectangular, or any other shape) are also considered cones. Generally, the base may be any shape and the apex may lie anywhere outside the plane of the base, as Chris previously defined cone:
Chris Peterson wrote:... my dictionary includes
a solid bounded by a circular or other closed plane base and the surface formed by line segments joining every point of the boundary of the base to a common vertex