science

12 posts

Believing and Knowing!
science education politics religion health

Believing and Knowing!

Learn How to Think and Reason. Learn How to Know the Truth and to distinguish between belief and truth! When we are small children, we learn from our parents. We believe what they say. As we grow older, we also learn from what we are told by others. There are grandparents, uncles and aunts, cousins and other relatives. There are teachers, clergy, and authorities in government.We are to believe what is said because the person saying it is supposed to know the truth and tells the truth. But ho

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
10 min read
How Good Is Our Sight?
science technology health

How Good Is Our Sight?

What can we "make out?" Look at the photo of the flowers. Now look at just one blossom. You can see five petals. Back up and look Back away from the image of the blossom, as far as you can in the room or where ever you are. Can you still see the individual petals? But what if I make the photo image much smaller? At the distance you read a book, you can still see all five petals as individual petals. But start moving backward away from the image. What happens as you get 5

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
5 min read
My Bridge across Wolf Creek
science technology travel

My Bridge across Wolf Creek

The Kansas Turnpike The Kansas Turnpike is a 236-mile-long freeway-standard toll road that lies entirely within the U.S. state of Kansas. It runs in a general southwest–northeast direction from the Oklahoma border to Kansas City. It passes through Wichita, Topeka, and Lawrence. It was built from 1954 to 1956, predating the Interstate Highway System. My Summer of 1956 Ground was broken for the Kansas Turnpike on December 31, 1954. Construction of the entire length of the turnpike was sc

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
4 min read
Dead Battery? What Not to Do!
science education technology

Dead Battery? What Not to Do!

What happened? Yesterday I planned to take the dog to a nearby dog park, but I would need to drive the car. So we prepared to go to the dog park, and when I tried to start the car, the battery was dead. I quickly discovered that I had left the headlights on the night before. So what do I do? The car is in the garage facing forward. So I cannot get a jumper-cable from another car, even if I could find someone to do it. So I called a neighbor who I knew, to see if she had a battery charger. She

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
7 min read
At the Bottom of a Sea
science technology health

At the Bottom of a Sea

We have no problem knowing that we are surrounded by air. We breathe it, and we feel the force of wind blowing against us when outside in a windstorm. Winds in storms can do great damage. Thus, the direct evidence that we are surrounded by air is something we experience. What are its properties? And what can it do? Let's Make An Interesting Observation I bought a 1-gallon metal can. After taking off the cap and pouring about 200 mL of water into the can, I placed it onto an electric stove h

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
6 min read
First Nuclear Fusion Explosion on Earth
science technology politics history

First Nuclear Fusion Explosion on Earth

During most of 1952, at age 20, I was stationed at Kwajalein Atoll, Marshall Islands, as a United States Air Force electronics technician. I had been interested in electronics from the time I was a child rummaging through junkyards looking for old radios so that I could experiment. I became very knowledgeable about electronics even before joining the Air Force. When I was sent to Electronics school, I found it very easy and therefore "tested out" of most components of the program, "graduati

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
5 min read
New Technology and Science Learning
science education

New Technology and Science Learning

Recently I talked with a 9th-grade high school student about her science class. She said it was an "online" biology course. I asked about the laboratory. She said there was no lab! Experience Before Terminology Perhaps the greatest violation of ample research evidence on how people learn science is the order in which terms are introduced in traditional instruction. First the term is given, then it is defined, often by using other unknown terms. Thus students are wrongly given terminology fi

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
3 min read
Mariner Warning!  Do What I Now Say, Not What I did!
science travel boating

Mariner Warning! Do What I Now Say, Not What I did!

Back in 1998, I bought a custom-built, 40 ft Ed Monk Trawler. This was my wonderful boat, Rainbow. This was a full-displacement vessel, with twin Lehman diesel engines, so it was very efficient. Most powerboats plane, and that requires a huge expenditure of fuel, but they are very fast. My trawler had a diesel generator so that we could have power whenever we were anchored and underway. When at a marina, we used its power. The trawler could do 1,100 miles on the 300 gallons of diesel fuel i

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
7 min read
The Colors of Sunlight - How Do We Know?
science history art health

The Colors of Sunlight - How Do We Know?

How do you know that sunlight (ordinary "white light") contains the colors of the rainbow? Oh, you say, "Because the light in a rainbow comes from sunlight," or "I can make these colors with a prism." (This photo was taken from the stern of my trawler, aptly named Rainbow, in 2000.) But how do you know that the colors of the rainbow are not made by the water drops? Or by the glass in the prism? Sir Isaac Newton addressed this question long ago, in 1671/72. And why 1671/72? That is anothe

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
28 min read
Cold Weather Warning
science health education

Cold Weather Warning

When the weather is this cold throughout the nation, I must express a serious warning about one of the most dangerous gases that exists. People run gasoline generators in their homes or garages; they burn fuels inside a house without proper ventilation, and sometimes they just forget to turn the engine off in the car sitting in the garage. This is especially serious with newer cars that have no key, and if they are hybrid, may not even be running when you walk into the house, unknowingly leaving

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
3 min read
The Acoustic Era
science history music technology

The Acoustic Era

Edison invented his phonograph in 1896, using wax at first and after a few years, using celluloid, the wax usually 2 minute, and the celluloid 4 min, although there were some 4 min wax.

Billy G. Aldridge
Billy G. Aldridge
4 min read