They actually figured out bees around the pandemic, busy time so it was easy to miss. They can fly because the beelieve they can, pretty much the same aerodynamic principle as Santa
Bees flying and tides are both well understood now. Tides have been for hundreds of years.
I don't know enough aerodynamics to describe how bumblebees fly
Tides are caused by the sun's and moon's gravity attracting the Earth's land and water.
If you had just said tides, I would have presumed you were being sarcastic, but bumblebee flight wasn't explained until fairly recently (within the last 25 years or so)
OK. In some ways I hate to say it, but I feel compelled. I've been in the unfortunate circumstance of having to eat soup with a fork. It is very possible, but slow. You the the area behind the tines (those slots)? It is curved with a fair amount of surface area. This can act as a small unstable spoon with practice or desperate need.
Might I suggest, should such a terrible fate ever befall you again, that you just tip the soup directly into your fucking mouth? The fork may even be employed to scrap and scoop chucks in the soup towards your gapping maw. I believe you will find this method very functional.
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Tweet by pj evans:
Cars have windows and can move. Houses have windows but can't move. So it's not the windows that make the car go, it's something else entirely
Reply by gelledegg:
this is what ancient philosophy is like
Reply by airyairyaucontraire:
Diogenes driving a mobile home into the symposium to ruin Plato's day.
I think it's just because the house windows are usually rectangle windows and rectangle windows can't roll without like a lumpy road. If you just put the house on a lumpy road I think it would move
Wait how does that work? Do the slots have some effect on the viscosity maybe?
Science cannot explain it. Just like how bees can fly or how the tides come in and out.
They actually figured out bees around the pandemic, busy time so it was easy to miss. They can fly because the beelieve they can, pretty much the same aerodynamic principle as Santa
Bees can fly because of the moon. Read a book.
Bees flying and tides are both well understood now. Tides have been for hundreds of years.
I don't know enough aerodynamics to describe how bumblebees fly
Tides are caused by the sun's and moon's gravity attracting the Earth's land and water.
If you had just said tides, I would have presumed you were being sarcastic, but bumblebee flight wasn't explained until fairly recently (within the last 25 years or so)
Liquids tend towards the deepest elevation on the fork, and if that's a slot, it falls through.
Ah, it's because you're in a gravity field.