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"Happy Birthday Benjamin Franklin!"

11 Comments -

1 – 11 of 11
Anonymous Uncle Al said...

Ben Franklin's funeral on 21 April 1790 was lead by the entirety of Philadelphia's clergy, boy-bunging Catholic priests to situationally prevaricating rabbis. Official Truth says it was out of respect for the great man. Worldy others suspect they wanted Franklin safely dead and buried without doubt.

12:16 PM, January 17, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

I appreciate the link to the poor levitating frog in the ultra-strong magnetic field ;-)

3:51 PM, January 17, 2007

Anonymous Anonymous said...

what a nice post! Thanks you reminded me of Franklin's birthday. And the frog is cool. How strong does the field need to be to make it levitate?

8:39 PM, January 17, 2007

Blogger Rae Ann said...

Hi Bee and Stefan,

Franklin was such an interesting and complex person, and this is a great post.

It seems that Stefan might be learning how to keep the marital peace: defer to the wife! ;-)

8:32 AM, January 18, 2007

Blogger Plato said...

Well on "useless knowledge, not," to some, he sat at the very heart of the constitution written for the United States.

my comment in regards to reasonOn constitution reform, Jefferson Davis words needed revision, to have a man like Benjamin Franklin stand up and devote a treaty on reason? It would guide the American view, to a healthy and just system of inquiry, as to the rights and freedoms shared by the American views? What lessons lie in scientific inquiry then to have those who stand at the forefront, and make it some intangible realism of the "forces of light and darkness "fighting to bring society into it's talons?

But more then that his views on a book's cover had signficance in terms of his "overcoat" that he put on for this life.

Some would refer to it as "reincarnation."


"Death, so called, is but older matter dressed
In some new form. And in a varied vest,
From tenement to tenement though tossed,
The soul is still the same, the figure only lost."


Poem on Pythagoras, Dryden's Ovid.

On Franklin's epitaph it reads....


"The Body of
B. Franklin, Printer
Like the Cover of an old Book
Its Contents turn out
And Stript of its Lettering & Guilding
Lies here. Food for Worms
For, it will as he believed
appear once more
In a new and more elegant Edition
corrected and improved
By the Author


and he was a good cryptographer?

10:26 AM, January 18, 2007

Blogger Plato said...

Apparently the epitaph written above was when he was 22 years old. At 84 this was the final one written below.

Benjamin and Deborah Franklin: 1790

And in regards to the work on the constitution, maybe you can see his hand in it?

It is nice to study these things, so you know what govern's the people, their rights, and freedoms.

Reading words by it's authors definitiely comes under the influences of it's time.

So the symbolism of "eagle" and such, may, from my point of view had been inherited from the "native people" of the United States.

An "aspiring view" between earth and heaven, the rights of all? About what was held sacred to these same native people, and all people in Franklin's eyes.

Writing constitutions are a very important aspects of building countries, nations. Organizations.

11:01 AM, January 18, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Hi anonymous,

How strong does the field need to be to make it levitate?

as far as I know, the first experiment with the levitated frog was done in the High Field Magnet Laboratory of the University of Nijmegen in the Netherlands. Check out the Levitation Pages! The frog was levitated in a field of about 16 Tesla.

For comparison, the Earth's magnetic field has about 50 Microtesla, and the LHC superconducting magnets yield 7 Tesla, and the magnetic field in the ATLAS detector will have 2 Tesla. MRI machines operate with fields below 2 Tesla.

By the way, the guy who did the trick with the frog, Andre Geim, shared the Ig Nobel Prize for this experiment. He is now at the University of Manchester in Britain, and he's one of the leading researchers in graphene. In between, he did some funny stuff with Gecko Tape...

Best, stefan

4:23 PM, January 18, 2007

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dear Stefan, Thanks so much, this is really interestin. I love the Gecko-idea! Is anything known whether the procedure had consequences for the health of the frog? I like your blog alot.

5:33 PM, January 18, 2007

Blogger CarlBrannen said...

As far as I know, Ben Franklin is the only male to be portrayed on a common American coin who wasn't also a president. On our paper money, he shares a similar honor with Hamilton. A $100 bill is sometimes called a "benjamin"; Hamilton is on the $10.

8:34 PM, January 18, 2007

Anonymous pioneer1 said...

Thanks! Great post. I enjoyed reading it. Benjamin Franklin was a great scientist.

10:59 PM, January 18, 2007

Blogger Ed Hird+ said...

Benjamin Franklin had a remarkable impact in so many ways, especially in the area of technology and science. A Benjamin Franklin article just received the ‘Top 100 Electricity Blogs’ Award http://bit.ly/z8Ckp

10:50 PM, November 08, 2009

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