Purgatory was made up to help the Church sell indulgences.
And (according to a sophmore I met yesterday) Vatican City is in Germany
And (according to a sophmore I met yesterday) Vatican City is in Germany
Yes but imperceptibly, the reason people point to old houses where the panes have thicker bottoms than tops is because of the method used to make glass back then (glass spinning). It would take something in the region of 1,000 years for it to be a measurable change.ggamer2 said:Glass is not a solid, it's an over-chilled fluid.
If you put a sheet of glass vertically after some years it will be thicker at the bottom and thinner on the top, because the glass will slowly flow down.
Or "Play it again, Sam", in Casablanca.Ldude893 said:The full quote "Beam Me Up, Scotty" was never actually uttered in Star Trek. Neither is "Luke, I am your father." in Star Wars.
As i understand it you use 10% with your concience and the rest 90% is used by your subconcience...manythings said:That always struck me as one of the most retarded facts in the world. Ahead of it of course is the idea that in the "other 90%" reside magical powers that you can unlock... for a fee.Dark2003 said:"Most people only use 10% of their brain" total bull
You only use about 10% of your brain power when your doing nothing
but most people are stupid anyway
Neither are the australian ones, nor, technically are the american ones...Innocence said:The notes used in English currency aren't actually made of paper.
The other 90% is used as your "keep living part". If we only used some brain we would have far less brain since we would evolve to remove what we don't need.GWarface said:As i understand it you use 10% with your concience and the rest 90% is used by your subconcience...manythings said:That always struck me as one of the most retarded facts in the world. Ahead of it of course is the idea that in the "other 90%" reside magical powers that you can unlock... for a fee.Dark2003 said:"Most people only use 10% of their brain" total bull
You only use about 10% of your brain power when your doing nothing
but most people are stupid anyway
I don't think anyone has use "paper" money in the last 40-50 years. Also money isn't really money, it's "Near-money". A promisary note produced to be redeemable for that amount of goods/services like stamps or coupons.Eisenfaust said:Neither are the australian ones, nor, technically are the american ones...Innocence said:The notes used in English currency aren't actually made of paper.
(unless you consider a 25% linen, 75% cotton combination, with red and blue synthetic fibres distributed throughout, as paper. Even then you'd have to change the definition of paper from ACTUAL paper to BANKNOTE paper)
incidentally, it costs the US government 6.4 cents to produce a bill, and 16,600,000 $1's are printed each day. A $1 bill typically lasts 21 months in circulation, and will almost always have some trace of cocaine on it
Actually it's the cerebellum, the size of which is also directly linked to an individual's mental and physical dexteritymanythings said:Proprioception is the sense of your body and how you are arranged at any given time, e.g. how you can eat with your eyes closed and scratch an itch without having to aim. Screwing with that sense can cause out of body experiences. Something to do with the Tempoparietal lobe if I remember correctly.
that would seem the case, however the american dollar bill has had no value tied to it since 1973, as opposed to the british pound, where each currency note has a direct value attached to it based on England's silver reserves (1 pound note = 1 pound sterling silver)manythings said:I don't think anyone has use "paper" money in the last 40-50 years. Also money isn't really money, it's "Near-money". A promisary note produced to be redeemable for that amount of goods/services like stamps or coupons.Eisenfaust said:Neither are the australian ones, nor, technically are the american ones...Innocence said:The notes used in English currency aren't actually made of paper.
(unless you consider a 25% linen, 75% cotton combination, with red and blue synthetic fibres distributed throughout, as paper. Even then you'd have to change the definition of paper from ACTUAL paper to BANKNOTE paper)
incidentally, it costs the US government 6.4 cents to produce a bill, and 16,600,000 $1's are printed each day. A $1 bill typically lasts 21 months in circulation, and will almost always have some trace of cocaine on it
Oops, At least I got the first part right. But I admit I was so shocked when I learned about it that I would believe in anything they told me.manythings said:Yes but imperceptibly, the reason people point to old houses where the panes have thicker bottoms than tops is because of the method used to make glass back then (glass spinning). It would take something in the region of 1,000 years for it to be a measurable change.ggamer2 said:Glass is not a solid, it's an over-chilled fluid.
If you put a sheet of glass vertically after some years it will be thicker at the bottom and thinner on the top, because the glass will slowly flow down.
All other liquids shrink. Sorry, Physics student.gellert1984 said:Water expands when it freezes, most liquids shrink.