Josh Clark
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
called a masticator, and it would basically chew up this rubber and make it into, meld it together and make it into a big single sheet of material, which was really helpful.
It does.
And the reason why is, again, it's abundant fuel.
But with fluoroscopy, it's basically like a movie, an x-ray movie.
Yeah, there's like real observational data there.
And then it burned.
It was a witch.
You can get it from desalinating seawater.
All right, we teased those first nanoseconds, nanomoments after the Big Bang.
Then it burned.
And then secondly, it's not radioactive at any point.
So part fire, too.
And you would do this to make sure a heart is beating correctly because you wanted to see it.
So you can see how these things kind of came together to form a log or a stone or a rabbit is another recurring theme.
Right, and we mentioned in that Enlightenment episode as well about scholasticism, about using scientific inquiry to explain theology, which was, you know, you're still working from a theological standpoint, but you're starting to use scientific inquiry, and the idea that you shouldn't just accept things as truth.
So it wouldn't make the thermonuclear reactor itself radioactive.
But they still had that temperature problem until Goodyear hit it.