Difference between revisions of "Give Us a Sign: Engineering Young and Old 18"

From Natural Philosophy Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Imported from text file)
 
(Imported from text file)
 
Line 13: Line 13:
 
An earlier article in this series' produced a lot of written discussion, some of which was published in these pages 2. It was not, of course, unexpected . Indeed, in the article itself I suggested that there would be demands comparable with those of some 2,000 years ago : "Give us a sign".  Now I thought that I had done this in revealing the amazing patent specification of one Henry Wallace of Missouri, but it obviously did not satisfy Ivir Coates. And yet Ralph Coates and I have so much in -'common. There are sentences in his text that I shall use again many times in defense of my theories...
 
An earlier article in this series' produced a lot of written discussion, some of which was published in these pages 2. It was not, of course, unexpected . Indeed, in the article itself I suggested that there would be demands comparable with those of some 2,000 years ago : "Give us a sign".  Now I thought that I had done this in revealing the amazing patent specification of one Henry Wallace of Missouri, but it obviously did not satisfy Ivir Coates. And yet Ralph Coates and I have so much in -'common. There are sentences in his text that I shall use again many times in defense of my theories...
  
[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
+
[[Category:Scientific Paper|sign engineering young old]]

Latest revision as of 10:28, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title Give Us a Sign: Engineering Young and Old 18
Author(s) Eric R Laithwaite
Keywords {{{keywords}}}
Published 1980
Journal Electrical Review
Volume 207
Number 3
Pages 31-33

Abstract

An earlier article in this series' produced a lot of written discussion, some of which was published in these pages 2. It was not, of course, unexpected . Indeed, in the article itself I suggested that there would be demands comparable with those of some 2,000 years ago : "Give us a sign". Now I thought that I had done this in revealing the amazing patent specification of one Henry Wallace of Missouri, but it obviously did not satisfy Ivir Coates. And yet Ralph Coates and I have so much in -'common. There are sentences in his text that I shall use again many times in defense of my theories...