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{{wikibreak}}
{{Education wikibreak}}
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{{Babel| en | en-gb-N | Oxford Spelling | fr-2 | ja-0 |:UBX/1337-3| la-2 | England | html-1 | BASIC-1 |:Scepia/cvg | :The Raven's Apprentice/Userboxes/User MS Windows{{!}}XP | :The Raven's Apprentice/Userboxes/User Firefox |:Menasim/Userboxes/User Google }}
{{Babel| en | en-gb-N | Oxford Spelling | fr-2 | ja-0 |:UBX/1337-3| la-2 | England | html-1 | BASIC-1 |:Scepia/cvg | :The Raven's Apprentice/Userboxes/User MS Windows{{!}}XP | :The Raven's Apprentice/Userboxes/User Firefox |:Menasim/Userboxes/User Google }}

Revision as of 15:19, 11 March 2017

Template:Education wikibreak

Notes

  • Real Name: Richard Chapling
  • Occupation: Mathematician (PhD student)
  • Interests: anime, video games.
  • Campaigns: Wants Dr St John to be Pope

Edited/Created Articles

Yu-Gi-Oh!

Zelda

And finally:

From Template:TooManyBoxes

From "Light Bulb"

A common misconception about light bulbs is that they emit light, when, in fact, they absorb darkness. This myth is mostly spread by hardcore Christians, although the Catholic Church, and most Protestant churches have taken no stance on the issue. The Eastern Orthodox Church has sided with the scientists, and its followers tend to support them on the issue. What the supporters of the emission theory use as proof is that light bulbs get hot when they are on. Thomas Edison's associate Charles Dickson explained in an early edition of Popular Mechanics that the heat comes from the friction of the darkness entering the glass. Dickson even referred to an interview with the New York Times where Edison explains the darkness absorption. Unfortunately, the issue with the interview has been lost over time, so there is no proof that Edison approved this theory. However, Scientists almost unanimously agree with the absorption theory, so it is considered scientific fact. This does not make the emission theory wrong, but it falls outside of the realm of science.