I have been reading SciAm cover to cover for 35 years. Terrific overviews of all kinds of topics. Gravitational lensing, ancient art, sociology, biology, and on and on. Professors were highly irritated by what I learned from SciAm. One said dismissively when she saw a copy on my desk "Oh, Scientific American is for high school students". So I asked her what gravitational lensing was. That shut her right up.
On Friday before Katrina hit, I was looking at the projected track, and I said hmm, that looks familiar...
http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...ane-prediction
Because I had seen it four years earlier.
I began contacting everyone I knew from that area and stuck my neck out and said that New Orleans was about to be destroyed and there would be thousands dead if they did not evacuate immediately.
As usual, most people laughed at me.
SciAm has been an important part of my "homework" over the years. I also listen to dozens of podcasts per day while riding the train to work and doing chores. The point of this is not to memorize everything, but to bring as many things to your attention as possible. The vast majority will turn out to be of little use, but here and there you will find gems. Now that the Internet gives total and complete recall, you need only remember that something exists to be able to retrieve it in full.
There is a special offer at the 1845 price!
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/...h-anniversary/
On Friday before Katrina hit, I was looking at the projected track, and I said hmm, that looks familiar...
http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...ane-prediction
Because I had seen it four years earlier.
I began contacting everyone I knew from that area and stuck my neck out and said that New Orleans was about to be destroyed and there would be thousands dead if they did not evacuate immediately.
As usual, most people laughed at me.
SciAm has been an important part of my "homework" over the years. I also listen to dozens of podcasts per day while riding the train to work and doing chores. The point of this is not to memorize everything, but to bring as many things to your attention as possible. The vast majority will turn out to be of little use, but here and there you will find gems. Now that the Internet gives total and complete recall, you need only remember that something exists to be able to retrieve it in full.
There is a special offer at the 1845 price!
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/...h-anniversary/
Comment