Friday, November 7, 2008

Accessories For Ballet Folklorico

Genesis of Scientific Discovery: Michael Faraday
























"The Faraday thought it was almost completely visual and surprisingly alien to mathematics. He was not brought in mathematics, nor had he received formal education in this area that is completely ignored, except for the simplest rudiments of arithmetic. Yet he could 'see' the tensions surrounding the magnets and electric currents appear as curves in space, and coined the phrase 'lines of force' to describe. (...)
Faraday saw the universe as composed of these lines of force and saw the light as electromagnetic radiation. His insights led to a purely imaginary non-simple theories but practical results, including the invention of the dynamo and electric motor. Hermann von Helmholtz
In 1881, one of the greatest mathematical physicists of his time, paid homage to the genius of Faraday, in his speech in memory of the scientist

"It 's all the more amazing considering the large number of general theorems, whose deduction method requires the highest skills in mathematical analysis, he discovered thanks to a kind of intuition, with the certainty of instinct, without the aid of a single mathematical formula. "(1)






















Writing Faraday, in fact, shows little aptitude for mathematics. What is striking, being a physicist, is the considerable vagueness in the writing formal (discarded). So the mind works primarily through the conceptual intuition (Uneven methodical Triple-width width between words uneven) and emotional empathy (Leaning Filiform), alternating moments of adherence to these sudden twists (Twisted), which involve sudden checks. This motion control is the main attraction to the concrete objective.
The writing is very obscure, and difficult to control may be based on objective data, seen as the raw material of the work of an experimental physicist. Perhaps this explains why the current energy perceived mainly as the personality is more equipped to sense psychic and telepath (Filiform, pendant).


1. Larrey Dossey, the soul-searching, Sperling & Kupfer Editori

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